This is the time of year when every day seems to bring new
graduation invitations for the class of 2006 in the mail. I began to wonder what
it must be like to finally leave school with all that energy and excitement only
to find out that you are now going to spend years paying off those student loans
that seemed like such a good idea at the time.
The Centre for Economic
and Policy Research reported recently that almost 65% of all students use loans
to pay for their education. With many students racking up debts of $90,000 or
more you start to wonder what it must be like to live under that type of
pressure. How do they manage to pay off these loans and still have a life? There
are many areas outside Southern California where you could buy a very nice home
for that amount of money.
Do we really need to put the youth of today,
our future, under this type of pressure all in the name of PROFIT. The laws
governing Student Loans are some of the most powerful laws in the land. Our
leaders have insured that it is a MOST profitable business for the lenders.
These lenders have more power than all other lenders. Credit card companies and
mortgage lenders cannot do what Congress has allowed the student loan providers
to do.
Sallie Mae is the largest student loan provider in the country.
They employ over 10,000 people across a number of states. Since they became a
public company trading on the stock markets, their shares have gone through the
roof. Let me outline why this is such a wonderful business for the likes of
Sallie Mae. The loans they give out are all guaranteed by the government (sorry
taxpayer), so whatever happens they get their money. This means, unlike a normal
lender who has to calculate risk against reward before agreeing to give out a
loan, for these providers there is NO risk, it's all reward.
It does not
end there. Should a student default on a loan (almost 25% do), the provider then
gets paid by the government (sorry taxpayer) and they are now allowed to send
that debt to a collection agency. It's normal for the loan to double in size at
this point. Sallie Mae owns a number of these collection agencies, the law
allows that too. They now have the power to garnish your wages without having to
go to court. They can also garnish your social security money, something no
other lender can do. Sallie Mae is allowed under these laws to keep 25% of all
the money recovered from the collection agency (that they own, nice business if
you can get it). Where I come from this would be called Legalized Mugging or
Jobs for the Boys.
Most of these students can forget about getting
married or buying a home. There main concern is “where's next months payment
coming from”. Maybe it's time we showed a little more compassion to these
students, after all they are our future.
Have an opinion or a question
you would like me to answer, then write me! http://www.CarlHampton.com