If these people cannot pay back the money why is someone lending it to them? Would anyone loan you $100 if they were not sure you at least SHOULD be able to pay it back? This, my friends, is liberalism at its best. Enslave fools with lies and you own them. It is no different than getting someone to look the other way when a crime is committed. Once you are complicit they own you. You have no choice but to do what your democrat masters say.
Astronomically high college tuition facilitated by a bottomless ocean of student loans has saddled Americans with a record $1.48 trillion in non-dischargeable debt – an amount which has more than doubled since the 2009 lows.
As we reported in January, nearly 40% of student loans taken out in 2004 are projected to default by 2023 according to the Brookings institute.
While in March we noted that debt-laden millennials were set back an average of $140,000 vs. their parents – a problem compounded by the fact that students aren’t just borrowing money for tuition; their student loans cover rent, food and other bills, leaving them with massive interest payments and in many cases, little prospect of getting ahead – much less saving for retirement.
Enter the million-dollar-debtors
While millions of Americans are drowning in student loans – 101 people have the ultimate albatross around their necks; student loan balances exceeding $1 million, according to the Wall St. Journal. Five years ago, there were just 14 people with loans that large.
Utah orthodontist Mike Meru, 37, is one of them. After graduating from Brigham Young University with no debt and a new marriage, Meru borrowed $601,506 debt to attend USC’s orthodontics program – while his new wife Melissa finding work as a USC administrative assistant to save on tuition. After a few years, his student loan had swelled to $1,060,94.
Mr. Meru said the dental school’s financial-aid director, Sergio Estavillo, estimated that the basic four-year program would require $400,000 to $450,000 in student debt, including interest. Mr. Estavillo said he didn’t recall the conversation but had no reason to doubt its accuracy. –WSJ
And despite Meru’s $225,000 salary in 2017 which leaves him with roughly $13,333 per month after taxes, he makes monthly payments of $1,590 by taking advantage of a government-sponsored debt repayment program. Without the program which still leaves his debt growing at $130 a day, Meru’s monthly payments would be $10,541.91 according to an email from his loan servicer. At this rate, Meru’s loan balance will exceed $2 million in 20 years.
Since refinancing his debt with the federal government in 2015, lowering the rate to 7.25%, Mr. Meru’s balance has grown by $148,948. It will keep growing through the 25-year life of the repayment plan until it reaches $2 million. -WSJ
All is not lost for Meru and many others like him, however – because thanks to the repayment program, Meru’s $2 million balance will be forgiven after 25 years.
He agreed to monthly payments at 10% of his discretionary income, defined as adjusted gross income minus 150% of the poverty level. Any balance remaining after 25 years is forgiven, effectively covered by taxpayers. The forgiven amount is then taxed as ordinary income. -WSJ
And while crushing Meru’s debt load places him in the upper echelon of those drowning in student loans, he attempted to mitigate the financial pain early on, before rates jumped and the snowball began to gather speed.
USC charged tuition of $56,757 in Mr. Meru’s first year, American Dental Association records show. To save on expenses, the couple lived with his parents. He drove a Buick inherited from his wife’s grandmother for the hour-plus trip between Newbury Park and USC, located south of downtown Los Angeles. After his first year, and with his wife’s tuition discount, he owed $43,976.
By Mr. Meru’s second year, the interest rate on new student loans jumped to 6.8%, and USC raised its tuition by 6%. By the end of that school year, he had taken out a total of $115,000 in loans, which also covered a summer semester. Interest rates were roughly triple what he had planned for.
Between Mike Meru and the other 100 people with $1 million or more in student loans, US taxpayers will be on the hook for around $200 million – again, just for those 101 individuals. Unfortunately, that’s just the tip of the iceberg.
While the typical student borrower owes $17,000, the number of those who owe at least $100,000 has risen to around 2.5 million, nearly 6% of the borrowing pool, Education Department data show.
More than a third of borrowers from one of the government’s main graduate school lending programs have enrolled in some form of federal loan-forgiveness plan. -WSJ
Outraged at his situation, Meru started a national dental-student movement in order to lobby Congress for lower rates on grad students. The effort, according to the Journal, went nowhere. Some dental school educators, meanwhile, have begun to worry about prohibitively expensive tuition.
USC’s dental school is one of the costliest higher educations one can attain – at $91,000 per year, and $137,000 when living expenses are factored in.
“I don’t think you’ll find any dental school dean in the country who will not tell you they’re concerned about the cost,” said Dr. Avishai Sadan, dean of USC’s Herman Ostrow School of Dentistry. “But what’s the action?”
Sadan says USC raised tuition “to cover the cost of delivering a top education.” (aka a top-tier dental school can take maximum advantage of the student loan racket).
“You cannot decide you’re just not raising tuition,” he said. “Everything that drives the operation, from salary raises to any other additional costs, have to come, for the most part, from tuition.”
Bottom line: with so many borrowers set to default on their student loans, those who can’t make ends meet will be able to pay roughly 10% of their income for 25 years. The remainder, such as Mark Meru’s $2 million balance, will be an obligation of the United States taxpayer.
Lord knows the banks who facilitated this scheme aren’t going to cover it.