Student Loan Debt Hits a New High

1.2 Trillion dollars.

Let that sink in and after you get finished with that, this site will help you visualize what a trillion dollars actually is

In one way I reckon that large student debt is evidence that people are seeking their education, which is a wonderful thing. It enriches one’s life in numerous way, not just having the parchment that makes you acceptable to employers.
But on the other hand, I cannot help but ponder why an education is causing so many SO much financial burden. $1000+ student loan repayments, just 6 months after you’ve graduated? What kind of situation do the holders of these loans expect graduates to be in?
If you look at it from a business standpoint, opportunities are rarely richer or more guaranteed than loaning money to people who need to get an education in order to make money and hope to have a middle class lifestyle. It’s almost like ransoming education. School is so expensive, (or should I say the “better” schools)… it might be justified by the quality of education, but its also the weight that the degree holds, which allows for more opportunities for the holder, along with many other factors, but for loaners the more it costs for the learner the higher stream of income that one can expect. On $100,000 in student loans, one can expect a return of perhaps $125,000? Sweet! A college education is supposed to allow one to “make it”, but how can you make it when a mountain of student loan debt is weighing on you before you really have a chance to get started.
The first years of one’s career are the most lean, and they become even leaner when you have a $500 bill coming right along with it.

I propose that student loan debt be treated like a mortgage, because it is more akin to a lifelong investment than it is to a payday loan, which is what it seems like now. It should be structured at an interest rate that is no more that 1.25% and should be spread out over 30 years. That means a student borrowing $100,000 for the life of their education would be paying $105 a month. I think that is fair and solid. It would prevent predatory lending to students and allow them to not be burdened with a huge sum before they are able to establish themselves.

1.2 Trillion is a lot of money.

5 Retirement Tips!

In the last 6 months I have taken an active interest in my retirement portfolio and savings. Although I am still in my 20’s, I am finally in a stable position with employment and I have been in my career field for 5 years now. I have spoken with several people and asked questions regarding retirement plans, savings plans, and other important investment information for my future. Additionally, I have started to research online and looked at several books. One intriguing short article I read in the Money Section of Black Enterprise Magazine recently peaked my interest and gave me some important information. Below is a summation of the article:

 

Don’t Run out of money in retirement: 5 tips to make sure you don’t fall short and outlive your savings…

Many baby boomers are beginning to enter their retirement years, and are falling short of their financial needs. In an article in the “Money” section of Black Enterprise Magazine, Carolyn Brown discusses 5 tips that can help baby boomers or those of younger generations to make smart decisions regarding their retirement, that will pay off in the end.

 

According to the Employee Benefit Research Institute, “early baby boomers, (people 58-64) have a 44% chance of not having enough money to pay basic retirement costs and uninsured medical expenses. “Late boomers (ages 48-57), and Generation X workers (38-47), have about a 45% chance of running short, the study concluded.”

 

The following 5 tips come from Clyde Anderson, who is a financial lifestyle coach:

 

  1. Determine your needs. The rule of thumb is that you’ll need about 70% to 80% of your pre-retirement income to live on during retirement, according to your lifestyle. To get a snapshot of what this looks like, analyze your spending. Look at your bank account statements monthly, or try using programs such as mint.com looking closely at various categories of spending including: entertainment, food, travel, etc.
  2. Do the math. Examine the three areas critical for determining how much money you will need to retire: A. Your current age (when do you plan to retire) . B. Your goals, C. Your projected life expectancy. (Most benefit specialists and companies use 90 as a standard age- how long will you live in retirement (20-30 years).
  3. Don’t set it and forget it. If you begin to make a plan, make it realistic enough to follow and continue to track your progress.
  4. Rebalance. You can take one of the two general approaches which is to rebalance on  a regular time schedule such as quarterly, semi-annually, or annually, or rebalance when the  allocation is a certain percentage points away from its target due to the difference between funds in your 401k over time.
  5. Read your statements. “Not looking at your statement is like throwing away money.” – says Anderson. Take the time to learn and understand what your statements are telling you especially in terms of the expense ratio and fees for each mutual fund in your account. “Did you know that just 1% in fees and expenses reduces your account balance at retirement by 28%, eating away your returns?”

College+

They always used to tell me, “pretty soon, you will have to at least have a master’s degree to get a job worth a damn” and it seems that they were right. The walls that guard a comfortable life are growing ever taller, but the base is weak, because its predicated on haves and have nots to an extreme degree.

 

It has been hard to keep track. Over the past four decades, we have experienced the oil embargo, Carter-era malaise and a few recessions. Mixed in were the thrills of the late 1990s and mid-aughts, when it seemed as if you were a sap if you weren’t getting rich or at least trying. But these dramas prevented many of us from realizing that the economic logic was changing fundamentally. Starting in the 1970s, labor was upended by a lot more than just formal government work rules. Increased global trade devastated workers in many industries, especially textiles, apparel, toys, furniture and electronics assembly. Computers and other technological innovations had an arguably greater impact. While factories continue to make more stuff in the United States than ever before, employment in them has collapsed.

Computers have hurt workers outside factories too. Picture the advertising agency in “Mad Men,” and think about the abundance of people who were hired to do jobs that are now handled electronically by small machines. Countless secretaries were replaced by word processing, voice mail, e-mail and scheduling software; accounting staff by Excel; people in the art department by desktop design programs. This is also true of trades like plumbing and carpentry, in which new technologies replaced a bunch of people who most likely stood around helping measure things and making sure everything worked correctly.

As a result, the people whose jobs remained valuable in that “Mad Men” office were then freed up to do more valuable things. A talented art director could produce more work more quickly with InDesign. A bright accountant could spend more time thinking of new ways to make and save money, rather than spending endless hours punching numbers into an adding machine. Global trade works much the same way. It’s horrible news for a textile factory worker in North Carolina, but it may be great for a fashion designer in New York.

A general guideline these days is that people are rewarded when they can do things that take trained judgment and skill — things, in other words, that can’t be done by computers or lower-wage workers in other countries. Money now flows around the world so quickly, and technology changes so fast, that people who thought they were in high demand find themselves uprooted. Many newspaper reporters have learned that their work was subsidized, in part, by classified ads and now can’t survive the rise of Craigslist; computer programmers have found out that some smart young guys in India will do their jobs for much less. Meanwhile, China lends so much money to the United States that mortgage brokers and bond traders can become richer than they ever imagined for a few years and then, just as quickly, become broke and unemployed.

One of the greatest changes is that a college degree is no longer the guarantor of a middle-class existence. Until the early 1970s, less than 11 percent of the adult population graduated from college, and most of them could get a decent job. Today nearly a third have college degrees, and a higher percentage of them graduated from nonelite schools. A bachelor’s degree on its own no longer conveys intelligence and capability. To get a good job, you have to have some special skill — charm, by the way, counts — that employers value. But there’s also a pretty good chance that by some point in the next few years, your boss will find that some new technology or some worker overseas can replace you.

Though it’s no guarantee, a B.A. or some kind of technical training is at least a prerequisite for a decent salary. It’s hard to see any great future for high-school dropouts or high-school graduates with no technical skills. They most often get jobs that require little judgment and minimal training, like stocking shelves, cooking burgers and cleaning offices. Employers generally see these unskilled workers as commodities — one is as good as any other — and thus each worker has very little bargaining power, especially now that unions are weaker. There are about 40 million of these low-skilled people in our work force. They’re vying for jobs that are likely to earn near the minimum wage with few or no benefits, and they have a high chance of being laid off many times in a career.

http://nyti.ms/rwRPZN

With all this being said, none of this is any excuse to not go to school and get that knowledge!