- ohne die Jobaussichten wesentlich zu steigern.
Von den über eine Billion (! engl.: trillion) Dollar an ausstehenden Studentendarlehen sind 124 Mrd. faul, d.h. die Kreditnehmer sind mit der Rückzahlung 90 Tage in Verzug.
In einem anderen Artikel, den ich kürzlich gepostet hatte, stand, dass viele Langzeitarbeitlose irgendwo ein (nichtsnütziges) Studium beginnen, nur um dadurch an die günstigen Studentenkredite zu kommen. Mit der Geld werden dann alte Handy- und sonstige Rechnungen gezahlt und der Kühlschrank aufgefüllt. So gesehen sind Student Loans eine Art von "Sozialhilfe auf Kredit" (bzw. ein verkapptes Sozialprogramm). Kein Wunder, dass immer mehr dieser Kredite faul werden.
theeconomiccollapseblog.com/archives/...aste-of-time-and-money
Michael Snyder vom "The Economic Collapse blog":
Is College A Waste Of Time And Money?
Are you thinking of going to college? If so, please consider that decision very carefully. You probably have lots of people telling you that an "education" is the key to your future and that you will never be able to get a "good job" unless you go to college. And it is true that those that go to college do earn more on average than those that do not. However, there is also a downside.
At most U.S. colleges, the quality of the education that you will receive is a joke, the goal of most colleges is to extract as much money from you and your parents as they possibly can, and there is a very good chance that there will not be a "good job" waiting for you once you graduate. And unless you have someone that is willing to pay your tuition bills, you will probably be facing a lifetime of crippling student loan debt payments once you get out into the real world. So is college a waste of time and money? In the end, it really pays to listen to both sides of the debate.
Personally, I spent eight years at U.S. public universities, and I really enjoyed those times.
But would I trade my degrees today for the time and money that I spent to get them?
Absolutely.
Right now, Americans owe more than a trillion dollars on their student loans, and more than 124 billion dollars of that total is more than 90 days delinquent.
It is a student loan debt bubble unlike anything that we have ever seen before, and now even those that make their living from this system are urging reform. For example, consider what a law professor at the University of Tennessee recently wrote for the Wall Street Journal...