This is just the tip of the iceberg..
WASHINGTON (AP) — The federal government will erase much of the debt of students who attended the now-defunct Corinthian Colleges, officials announced Monday, as part of a new plan that could cost taxpayers as much as $3.6 billion.
This only applies to people who took out student loans to attend Corinthian Colleges -
Yea, that's exactly why it's just the tip of the iceberg. There are several other for-profit college scams out there just waiting to blow up. The fact that just Corinthian resulted in $3.6 billion in cancelled loans suggests the true scale of this catastrophe.
But it's not just the fly-by-night scam colleges involved in the student dept crisis, as the staggering figure of 7 million Americans in default on student loans suggests. As other posts have pointed out, tuition costs have skyrocketed in recent years, both causing and caused by unbridled predatory lending from crooked banks backed by a corrupt government. The high-paying jobs promised to students who took out these loans have not materialized due to off-shoring of "middle-class" jobs and the bank-instigated recession. So there are droves of unemployed college grads fighting over jobs wiping tables at cafes for minimum wage plus tips.
The student loan business in the US has turned into a major racket, and I can cite the sources that prove it if anyone wishes to contest my claim.
What other scams are out there? Don't call foul unless you have facts or even details of a hunch to support it.
I wouldn't say that student loans have become a racket, I have student loans, I earned the education they paid for and I've benefited directly from that education.
Here's how I see it, first, the availability of student loans increases the demand on education (because more people can afford to go), when demand goes up and supply stays the same it's reasonable to assume that prices (i.e., tuition) go up, which then leads to higher loan needs for future generations of students.
Students need to realize why they're going to school and weigh if taking out the loan is a good decision based on the degree they'll earn or pay they'll be able to command with that degree in hand. This thought process doesn't always happen, which leads to students with a lot of debt and a lack of commitment to education for career or a career that doesn't pay enough to pay off the debt.
Should this be the fault of the student/borrower or the fault of the University or the fault of the student loan company? Everyone will have a different opinion on this, but it's not really a racket as you claim.