Ex-Students With 'Income-Based' Loan Payments Face Crushing Tax Bill
So this showed up in my Facebook feed last night. Here is exactly what I posted about this article on Facebook:
"Stories like this are really irritating. SO sorry you have to pay back money you borrowed!
Oh wait, you AREN'T paying it back. You're knowingly paying way less than you should so you'll still have debt in 25 years and the government will take care of it for you... AND you're whining about it.
The government is going to forgive hundreds of thousands of dollars in debt that you knowingly incurred and in return you just have to pay taxes on it. Grow up!
I feel like I'm living in the Twilight Zone."
Strangely, all of my fellow millennial are silent on my post....
"Stories like this are really irritating. SO sorry you have to pay back money you borrowed!
Oh wait, you AREN'T paying it back. You're knowingly paying way less than you should so you'll still have debt in 25 years and the government will take care of it for you... AND you're whining about it.
The government is going to forgive hundreds of thousands of dollars in debt that you knowingly incurred and in return you just have to pay taxes on it. Grow up!
I feel like I'm living in the Twilight Zone."
Strangely, all of my fellow millennial are silent on my post....
Previous comments... You are currently on page 2.
So borrow, beg, or steal. You have a right to live the way you want, even if someone else has to pay for it. Magic thinking.
The saddest part of this is he's planning on paying $575 for the next 22 years. In 20 years, $575 will be equivalent to paying around $300 and change. He's frickin lawyer! He earns $90k. He should find a way to pay $20k a year or so to the loans, so that he's at least going the right direction. If he gets involved with boards and brings in clients, he'll double his pay to $180k in five years. Then this debt is a lot less significant. Before 22 years, he can be a partner at a good firm or have started his own firm, and whatever's left of the debt will be just noise.
His arithmetic sounds right in that he's on track to get $400k in debt forgiveness in 2038. The more important thing than that, though, is that he not plod along for 22 years doing basically the same job barely able to pay the loans. I've seen immigrants with little formal education build that much wealth over decades though hard work. A CA lawyer should not plan for a static life of paying $575/mo. That's his real problem.
Too much imaginary money, and not enough people making real money.
Why is he not paying it down?
Same reason why south american countries who took out loans from US banks didn't. The interest rates are unreasonably high compared to the cost of the money to the lenders.
The banks collected lots more in interest than the principle they loaned to the SA countries, and then they got the US taxpayers to cover the banks "loss" of the principle balance. that is on credit (the principle) that the banks created from nothing. No it wasn't the banks investment capital, it was created from nothing.
The same thing is being done again on the student loans. Banks are paying near zero interest to their depositors, and creating the student loans at no cost. Then they are charging the borrowers 8% interest and adding any shortfall of payments to the principle. That's why the loan principle is now $220,000 when it was $145,000 when it was borrowed in 2012. In the end, the "debt" is forgiven after the bank has received millions in interest, and the fedgov gets a payoff in income taxes. The article doesn't say if the bank forgives the loan, but my guess is that the taxpayer gets stuck with paying the bank for the "loss" that isn't a loss.
Yes, the students agreed to the contract. They are responsible for that action.
I guess it's true that even law students have trouble with math.