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Old 11-21-2011 | 09:37 PM
  #81172  
PilotFrog
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Originally Posted by Jesse
Not going to get any better if some people get there way with an easy out to paying off your college loan.
Assuming the panel approves these rules eventually, they will cost taxpayers $575 million a year, according to the Congressional Budget Office's scoring of the 2010 law. Once in effect, borrowers will not have to pay more than 10% of their "discretionary income" each year, regardless of how much they owe. The government defines discretionary income as the difference between the borrower's adjusted gross income and 150% of the federal poverty line. If the money isn't completely paid back in 20 years, the remaining debt will be forgiven.
That's right. Wait 20 years and, presto, you're student debt-free.
Remember, student loans from the government are available regardless of credit history or assets, so default rates are high and have been rising—to 8.8%, according to the most recent government data. Add the possibility that people can choose or end up in occupations that pay low salaries, and the taxpayer loses again. A student who finances an expensive education and then pursues a career with meager salaries could be sticking taxpayers with five- or even six-figure losses by year 20. The loan then becomes a very expensive grant.
It gets even more expensive for taxpayers when student borrowers take a "public service" job after graduation, thanks to a program that began in 2007. "Public servants" can get all of their remaining federal student-loan debt forgiven after only 10 years. This applies to government employees such as teachers and to workers at nonprofits.
I believe this is how England does it as well. I could never understand how these kids just out of University could travel and afford such a nice living. Sure you have a 50 year mortgage and pretty much have the rest of your life to pay back just the interest of your education loan, why not spend the rest.