The Problem Of Student Debt

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Current debates suggest making public colleges free will solve the student debt crisis but is it fair that we expect our local community colleges to take on all the responsibility and fill in the gaps that exist in higher education today? Student debt has doubled over the past few years and is now reached over $1 trillion. With student loan debt surpassing credit card debt, auto loans and home equity lines of credit, it’s no wonder students dropping out are at an all-time high. It’s safe to say every college student is or will be affected by Student debt.
The best plan to solve the problem of student debt is to decrease or eliminate tuition. These solutions would require the compliance of universities on an individual basis to cut back on unnecessary …show more content…

Student debt is not their primary concern in the end — the loan money usually gets deposited directly with the colleges, so they get paid either way — and the main job of the admissions staff, after all, is to admit students. I want to include information about the good and bad of student loans so I will use the information to show my readers that it’s important to do your research and stay a head of the game on your loans or you will find yourself on the losing end and in debt. Student Debt is a big problem because most Americans are not getting paid enough to pay their bills let alone the rising tuitions …show more content…

The problem extends far beyond the much ballyhooed federal debt. The power of debt extends to nearly every aspect of modern life. Our homes, schools, roads, bridges, highways, utilities, corporations and virtually every product and good produced and sold depend on debt. By some estimates as much as 30 cents of every dollar we spend goes to cover interest payments on the debt accrued to make and sell all that we buy. (For example, of the $6.5 billion of private enterprise income in 2012, 36.8 percent went to interest payments.) Student debt became the next territory for Wall Street to occupy. Once again, this required upending successful past practices. From WWII through the mid-1970s, public higher education was virtually free, led first by the GI Bill of Rights and then by the robust California and New York tuition-free higher educational systems. As the chart below shows, until the late 1980s, there was virtually no student loan debt at all. But as money for the public sector dried up (largely due to tax breaks for the rich) public financial support for higher education lagged behind tuition costs. Wall Street filled the breach and student debt

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