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So as I recorded this it was late August, and the Student Loan Debt Relief Plan was announced about a week ago. Since the announcement there's been all sorts of discussion about whether or not the debt cancellation portion of the plan is fair; whether or not it goes far enough, if it's just political pandering, and on, and on, and on. So instead of the typical episode I thought we'd take a quick look at the info currently available about the plan, discuss some of the pros and cons of a college education and college debt, and end with my thoughts on what the takeaways are from all of this for you.

Student Loan Debt Relief Plan

So let's start with the basics. Perhaps the best place to get info on the Student Loan Debt Relief Plan is studentaid.gov, or specifically studentaid.gov/debt-relief-announcement. Studentaid.gov is an official website of the U.S. Department of Education. Here you'll find the basics of the plan. You can also subscribe to get updates at ed.gov/subscriptions

There are 3 main parts to the plan: 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Pros and Cons of College/College Debt (Britannica ProCon.org):

 

 

  1. The average college graduate makes $570,000 more than the average high school graduate over a lifetime.

 

 

  1. Return on investment (ROI) is calculated by dividing  the money earned as a result of a college degree by the money spent on a college degree. A college degree has a return of 15% per year as an investment, larger than the stock market (6.8%) and housing (0.4%).

 

 

  1. Only 34% of American jobs require a high school diploma or less in 2017, compared to 72% in the 1970s.

 

 

  1. The unemployment rate for Americans over 25 with a bachelor's degree was 1.9% in Dec. 2019, compared to 2.7% for those with some college or associate's degrees, 3.7% for high school graduates, and 5.2% for high school drop-outs

 

 

  1. Average Student Loan Debt (Forbes.com)
    1. $1.75 trillion in total student loan debt (including federal and private loans)
    2. $28,950 owed per borrower on average
    3. About 92% of all student debt are federal student loans; the remaining amount is private student loans
    1. Borrowers between the ages of 25 and 34 carry about $500 billion in federal student loans
    2. Borrowers ages 35 to 49 owe more than $620 billion in student loans.
    3. 2.4 million borrowers aged 62 or older that owe $98 billion in student loans.
  2. Federal Loans by Age

 

 

  1. In 2013 56% of employers thought half or fewer of college graduates had the skills and knowledge to advance within their companies. 
  2. 30% of college graduates felt college did not prepare them well for employment, specifically in terms of technical and quantitative reasoning skills. 

 

 

Final Thoughts/Takeaways

Resources

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