| Good question. EG Why doesn’t everyone default on a loan? This is asking “how do loans work”. Typically, a loan with interest is a gamble. You want to get your money back with a return. If you loan money you want to ensure you will get your money back by qualifying the applicant. There is a risk though because they might not pay it back, thus you increase the interest rate according to how qualified the loan is. Good investors really focus on getting a qualified applicant (one that can pay it back). Sometimes they don't get their money back and they are forced to write it off - it is apart of the loan business. Basically, I am not trying to be insulting but I will end up explaining how a loan works - so I will stop there. With college loans ALL basic loan concepts are wrong. You cannot default on a college loan by law. It follows you through marriage, bankruptcy, or even service in Afghanistan. The people which made these poor loans know they made poor loans backed by the US government. Thus, they have lobbyists pushing congress to ensure student loans are 'unforgivable'. SO! Investing in a student loan is a damn good deal. You have 0 chance of someone defaulting because it is illegal to default. The loan has zero risk. This is why tuition has exploded and why we have a crisis. So, if you want to major in 18th century French Dance at Yale for 190k - there isn't an investor willing to stop you. |
People need jobs and you have a job shortage.
College is seen to be the best/only option for a middle class life - which is driving people to college.
College is not free in America. So people need to pay, but job pay is concentrated in certain fields, and any hitch in the process means that payment schedule gets extended.
To a certain extent, the problem is of course having loans.
But that would just make the main problem obvious - life is expensive and there’s now fewer ways to make a middle class life.
This is like the Indian job market- You are either a STEM / law/ CA / or bust.