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  • Student Loans: The Only Debt Millennials Care About?

    Student Loans: The Only Debt Millennials Care About?

    Student loans are the beginning and end of debt problems for Millennials, a fact that previous generations cannot seem to wrap their heads around.

    Out of one side of their mouths, Baby Boomers and Gen Xers are appalled that today’s youth would dare take out loans for college. Some even cynically suggest they don’t attempt higher learning at all.

    Out of the other, these same groups are equally bothered that Millennials are largely uninterested in credit cards. Some are baffled that Gen Yers would rather live at home with their parents to cut down on costs than consider a mortgage.

    To Millennials, college debt is a burden earned in pursuit of their version of the American dream. Although an increasing number of them are having to forgo that dream altogether.

    Everything else is entirely too risky. This shift in values and thinking has led to some interesting clashes in opinion.

    What is behind the negative reaction by previous generations to what sort of debt Millennials value?

    Blame it on a growing generation gap.

    For boomers and even Gen Xers, credit cards and mortgages combined to give them access to the things that physically embodied the “American Dream”.

    Things like a nice house, new car, and being able to buy whatever stylish items they wanted “on credit”.

    Millennials are a generation that lived through the bubble collapsing as a result of unregulated borrowing and irresponsible spending by their parents and grandparents. As such, they simply aren’t interested. Give them debit cards and leave them alone.

    Let them wallow in the fact that they are paying back fifty thousand dollars in student loans for a degree for which they only discovered there are no jobs upon graduating.

    But don’t worry too much about Millennials.

    Even with their financial priorities shifted to student loans, they have already carefully considered the reality of a post-recession world.

    It only makes sense as they are closer to ground zero than Gen Xers or Baby Boomers.

    They are weighing their options and making moves to be as financially responsible as possible.

    That’s something older generations should be proud of. When the young learn from both their mistakes AND yours, that’s a sign things are moving in the right direction.

  • Graduate Student Loans Regulations Proposed by Obama

    The Obama administration took new steps on Friday and proposed “gainful employment” regulations to hold for-profit colleges and other career training programs accountable for producing graduates who can earn enough money to pay back student loans.

    The regulations are intended to protect students from amassing large amounts of student loan debt that they will not be able to pay off after graduation.

    “Career-training programs offer millions of Americans an opportunity they desperately need to further their education and reach the middle class,” Education Secretary Arne Duncan told reporters in a conference Thursday, a day before the official announcement of the “gainful employment” program.

    “Today, too many of these programs fail to provide students with the training that they need at taxpayers’ expense and the cost to these students’ futures,” added Duncan.

    “Most will pass. Many programs, particularly those at for-profits, will not,” explained Duncan.

    Roughly 8,000 academic programs would be required to comply with the standards, federal officials said at the conference Thursday.

    There are two metrics education programs must pass in order to be considered compliant with the “gainful employment” program. Education programs would fail the debt-to-earnings standard if graduates who qualified for federal aid spend more than 12 percent of their annual earnings on student debt, or more than 30 percent of their discretionary earnings for any two out of three years.

    The other metric is that programs must have a student loan cohort default rate of 30 percent or less for three consecutive years.

    The program would penalize for-profit institutions of higher education that do not comply with the regulations by denying them access to federal student aid programs.

    The new rules of the “gainful employment” program are subject to change following a 60-day public commentary period.

    After the public comment period, the U.S. Education Department has approximately two months to further amend the rules, reported Inside Higher Ed.

    The department would then send any revisions to the White House Office of Management and Budget for review. For the regulations to take effect by July of next year, the feds must publish their final version by Oct. 30.

    If passed, institutions would be subject to regulations under gainful employment in 2016, Duncan said.

     

    Image via Wikimedia Commons