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    Class of 2011, Most Indebted Ever

    Fantasy Finance

    $22,900: Average student debt of newly minted college graduates

    The Class of 2011 will graduate this spring from America's colleges and universities with a dubious distinction: the most indebted ever.

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    Even as the average U.S. household pares down its debts, the new degree-holders who represent the country's best hope for future prosperity are headed in the opposite direction. With tuition rising at an annual rate of about 5% and cash-strapped parents less able to help, the mean student-debt burden at graduation will reach nearly $18,000 this year, estimates Mark Kantrowitz, publisher of student-aid websites Fastweb.com and FinAid.org. Together with loans parents take on to finance their children's college educations -- loans that the students often pay themselves -- the estimate comes to about $22,900. That's 8% more than last year and, in inflation-adjusted terms, 47% more than a decade ago.

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    In the long run, the investment is probably worth it. Education is a much better reason to borrow money than buying cars or McMansions, and it endows people with economic advantages that the recession and slow recovery have only accentuated. As of 2009, the annual pre-tax income of households headed by people with at least a college degree exceeded that of less-educated households by 101%, up from 91% in 2006. As of April, the unemployment rate among college graduates stood at 4.5%, compared to 9.7% for those with only a high-school diploma and 14.6% for those who never finished high school.

    Also, graduating with debt might not be all bad. If one buys the argument -- popular among private-equity investors who buy companies using large amounts of debt -- that the need to meet regular loan payments helps focus people on finding ways to make money, then high student-debt levels might help the country derive more benefit from its best-educated residents (as long as they don't spend their energy creating financial products that ultimately blow up).

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    Still, the growth in student debt marks a shift toward a form of obligation that can be a lot more onerous than credit cards or home loans. Student debt can carry interest rates as high as those on subprime mortgages, and it's much harder to shed in the event of trouble. There's no house to give back to the bank, and even bankruptcy rarely offers relief. As of December 2010, total student debt outstanding stood at $530 billion in the U.S., up 29% from December 2007, according to the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. Other types of household debt shrank 8% over the same period. Given the state of the job market, many degree-holders will face a long slog to get debt-free: The Collegiate Employment Research Institute estimates that the average salary for holders of new bachelor degrees will be $36,866 this year, down from $46,500 in 2009.

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    In the near term, the debt burden could weigh on both the housing market and the broader economy. College graduates struggling to pay off debts are more likely to put off major milestones such as leaving home, getting married and buying a house, at a time when the creation of new households in the U.S. remains well below its long-term average.

     

    9 comments

    • Spook  •  Texarkana, Texas  •  16 days ago
      Degrees are dead. The real money is in opening your own business. Pass it on!
    • Smitty  •  Sunnyvale, California  •  3 months ago
      Student loan debt forgiveness is not far away. Too many people in the U.S. are graduating and leaving the country to work overseas in countries that don't garnish wages for U.S. debt defaults.
    • Spoiled  •  Raleigh, North Carolina  •  4 months ago
      It would help if people where able to get a job in there field then everyone would be ok with paying back there student loans. a college degree is just not enough to get a job now a days. A lot of people are having a hard time
    • Irfan Halimi  •  Austin, Texas  •  4 months ago
      A automobile has intrinsic value. A paper declaring your major does not.
      • thelegendcontinues 3 months ago
        The automobile has intrinsic value that depreciates exponentially every year. A college degree gives you enhanced earning ability over time (unless you majored in philosophy, in which case you're screwed).
    • don s  •  Las Vegas, Nevada  •  4 months ago
      obama is also sending the wrong message. obama uses deficit spending schemes to give
      the impression that it grows the economy. When actually obama uses it for RISKY investments with his FAT CAT DONORS.........for political kickbacks 2012.
      • Vegas09 16 days ago
        you should try reading work economic history along with current economic policy. gov stimulus ended long ago, which is why real GDP growth did not meet expectations. US workers are paying down debt so there are not monies left for consumption. The stimulus was not big enough and far too much relied on tax cuts as Krugman stated in 2009. The GOP forced austerity (fiscal contraction of gov stimulus) to early when unemployment was still high, the same exact thing Hoover did which made the Great Depression deeper and longer than it needed to be, the same has occurred with the Great Recession. Austerity measures only work when gov stimulus is crowding out investment, etc. from the private sector which it is not. the private sector reduced workforces and capital spending to cut down on expenses and boost profits. It's why large firms in the US experienced a increase of profits of 10% during the recession recovery while their foreign counterparts experienced a decrease in profits of 10%.

        So many of you on the right have no concept of comparative economics or US economic or world recession history.

        you keep yapping on about the 840B stimulus which would have not been necessary had the GOP not deregulated the financial sector and allowed wallstreet to self-regulate which caused the banking collapse which then turned into a global recession.

        9T in US homeowner wealth was lost, never to be recovered and most of that by the working class. then there is the 7.77T that the FRB lent to US banks to prop them up to keep their stock shares from falling and causing another repeat of 1929.

        you don't know jack squat
      • don s 14 days ago
        you have the Left TALKING POINTS.......perfectly.
    • Todd  •  4 months ago
      Google "Twixters". Have fun in your parent's basement. Please try to chip in a little for food.
    • Baron  •  4 months ago
      I see it this way: the diminishment of the college education happened in 2 waves. First, when they let in people on "athletic" scholarships, clearly in an attempt to muscle in certain groups, you had the first wave of dumbing down. Then, Obama comes in & announces 'college is for everybody', and the colleges make it so, instituting all kinds of crap courses and phony degrees. The college machine is the next bubble that is going to bust.
    • Face Plate  •  5 months ago
      College degrees aren't worth the paper they're printed on anymore. They are merely socialist indoctrination centers, and while they preach the evils of wealth and money, they dig as deeply into your pocket as they can, and have no problem directing you to financial aid opportunities so you can get as deeply into debt as necessary to ensure they can continue to keep their ridiculous tuition increases going. This, despite the fact that they are tax-exempt and sitting on millions and billions in endowments. I've interviewed some of those "high GPA" grads -- ones who can barely write an intelligible sentence, can't add or subtract, but who nevertheless want to know exactly what the company intends to pay them, and will indignantly tell you why it's not enough.
    • wmc  •  5 months ago
      It's probably worth it if you study something that will give you a career that pays. If you want to study something "fluffy" don't bother.
      • Baron 4 months ago
        Problem with your comment is that it sounds like stable, solid advice, til you consider this: your "rock solid, paying career" choice can, and most likely will be, either OUTsourced to India or China or INsourced by the illegal/legal moochers they let in this country. Surely you cannot help but see all the foreign doctors, the engineers, etc that are foreign? So, that advice isn't as solid as you may think.
      • Todd 4 months ago
        If your job can be automated, outsourced or digitized it will be. I don't care what is written on your sheepskin.
      • Todd 4 months ago
        Do you have any idea how many medical doctors are going broke?

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