Anonymous wrote:I got no problems with the proposals.
It doesn't attack the root cause of the problem though - which are costs and costs that keep going up.
Allow student loan debt to be dischargeable in bankruptcy, period. We allow dvery other debt to be discharged in bankruptcy. When more risk is injected into thos whole stupid system, lenders will start lending less and colleges will be forced to control costs and even slash them. But with infinite credit taps open and no risk for lenders because they're sheilded from bankruptcy, this entire charade of never ending price increases continues.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don’t expect others to pay back YOUR loans. It’s pretty simple.
Yes! Let's take that same energy and apply it to the PPP loans!
Oh, you don't like that, do you?
Anonymous wrote:I got no problems with the proposals.
It doesn't attack the root cause of the problem though - which are costs and costs that keep going up.
Allow student loan debt to be dischargeable in bankruptcy, period. We allow dvery other debt to be discharged in bankruptcy. When more risk is injected into thos whole stupid system, lenders will start lending less and colleges will be forced to control costs and even slash them. But with infinite credit taps open and no risk for lenders because they're sheilded from bankruptcy, this entire charade of never ending price increases continues.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. Cancel them all. Public education should have been free in the first place.
Great, I await reimbursement for the college tuitions of my three kids (all at public universities) paid for in full by saving for many years. Thanks!
Newsflash! Public universities are cheap because they are are subsidized by tax payers . So your kids were no different from Section 8 recipients.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. Cancel them all. Public education should have been free in the first place.
Almost everyone has an opportunity to go to a public institution, and many are talented enough to get scholarships at certain institutions.
1. Link default rates to universities. Universities with high default rates are out of any government loan programs.
2. Ability to borrow is a function of ability to pay... majors with higher incomes qualify for larger loan balances.
3. Set interest rates close to government cost of borrowing for any public loan programs.
Do you think colleges are free? Even the cheap public university is $15k a year and that is without room and board.
Anonymous wrote:Don’t expect others to pay back YOUR loans. It’s pretty simple.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. Cancel them all. Public education should have been free in the first place.
Almost everyone has an opportunity to go to a public institution, and many are talented enough to get scholarships at certain institutions.
1. Link default rates to universities. Universities with high default rates are out of any government loan programs.
2. Ability to borrow is a function of ability to pay... majors with higher incomes qualify for larger loan balances.
3. Set interest rates close to government cost of borrowing for any public loan programs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. Cancel them all. Public education should have been free in the first place.
Great, I await reimbursement for the college tuitions of my three kids (all at public universities) paid for in full by saving for many years. Thanks!
Anonymous wrote:I got no problems with the proposals.
It doesn't attack the root cause of the problem though - which are costs and costs that keep going up.
Allow student loan debt to be dischargeable in bankruptcy, period. We allow dvery other debt to be discharged in bankruptcy. When more risk is injected into thos whole stupid system, lenders will start lending less and colleges will be forced to control costs and even slash them. But with infinite credit taps open and no risk for lenders because they're sheilded from bankruptcy, this entire charade of never ending price increases continues.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I only support two policies.
1) Students pay off their own debt
2) Removing the government from the equation
Plus colleges should be held liable for defaults. That would lower interest rates.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. Cancel them all. Public education should have been free in the first place.
No. If you take out a loan, you need to pay it back. But for gods sake, not double the amount. Lower or eliminate interest. Stop the madness.