gut;1573338 wrote:This is just laughable. A college student graduating with even $60k in debt should be able to pay that back within 5-6 years if it's a priority with good financial management.
More laughable still is $60k is a mortgage for a lot of people, whom are considerably older than that college grad and making a lot less than that college grad - talking someone with 2-3X the earning power and their whole life ahead of them.
With average starting salaries over $50k, $30k in average debt is really no big deal. For comparison sake, a gross income of $50k would easily qualify you for a $200k mortgage.
This is nothing but bullshit class warfare, but the sad part is it really makes no difference rather the student pays for their education up front, or for someone else's on the back-end thru higher taxes. And effectively that's kind of exactly how a student loan works.
IN addition, one can attend a college that will commit in writing to paying the students loans completely if they are not employed at defined income levels.
Add that to the movement of certain Universities to develope degree programs that can be had for a 4 year total of $10,000 makes the cries for help appear politically and ideologically motivated. ...thats $2,500 per year for a full time student. That's less than I paid more than 2 decades ago.