Student Loans, the Next Big Threat to the U.S. Economy?
By Caroline Salas Gage and Janet Lorin January 16, 2014
Tiffany Roberson works for the state of Texas as a parole officer, teaches part-time, and is living with her parents after having completed her masters degree. Shes held off marrying her boyfriend of four years and starting a family because she owes more than $170,000 in federal and private student loans that she took out to pursue her education in criminal justice. Ive never gone into default, the 30-year-old says. What really hurts is people say Im a bum for living at home.
Stories like Robersons are sadly common in the U.S. Student loans today are one of the only deteriorating pockets of consumer credit, with balances and delinquency rates rising to record highs even as a strengthening economy allows Americans to reduce total borrowing. Outstanding student debt topped $1 trillion in the third quarter of 2013, and the share of loans delinquent 90 days or more rose to 11.8 percent, according to the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. By contrast, delinquencies for mortgage, credit card, and auto debt all have declined from their peaks.
The New York Federal Reserves move to measure the size of the student loan load says a lot about how concerned the central bank is about a possible threat to the economy. Our job is to really understand whats happening in the financial system, and the very rapid rise in student loan debt over the last few years can actually have some pretty significant consequences to the economic outlook, New York Fed President William Dudley told reporters in November. People can have trouble with the student loan debt burdenunable to buy cars, unable to buy homesand so it can really delay the cycle.
The federal government is the source and backer of most of the loans. Im always made very nervous by a credit market that benefits from government guarantees and is expanding very rapidly, Jeffrey Lacker, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond, said on Jan. 10 at a Greater Raleigh Chamber of Commerce event in North Carolina. Thats what were seeing with student loans, and its what we saw with housing. As the New York Feds Dudley explained in November, to the extent that student loan burdens become very, very high, there are presumably going to be losses to the federal government.
Economists at the New York Fed are analyzing student debt as part of their quarterly reports on national household credit. That project got started six years ago as the financial crisis unfolded, and the researchers and their then-boss, Timothy Geithner, realized there wasnt a good way to study total consumer borrowing. As they began assembling their own figures, relying on a sample from credit reports from Atlanta-based Equifax (EFX), they discovered that data on student borrowing were particularly sparse because of gaps in the frequency and types of information available.
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http://www.businessweek.com/articles/2014-01-16/student-loans-the-next-big-threat-to-the-u-dot-s-dot-economy
CFLDem
(2,083 posts)You mean the current one. There's way too many young people forgoing houses and families and cars because of that crap.
Not to mention the more seasoned citizens wasting retirement so they can be retrained just to make it to retirement and then not hired because of age discrimination.