|
|
|
|
|
by Ansil849
1428 days ago
|
|
> How failure to generate income on their degrees is a lender's problem? Clearly,there is an issue with inflated costs of getting a degree and finding a job with a low-demand degree, but why try solving it at the lender's expense? Yeah, I've never really understood this logic either. If someone lends money from me to, let's say go buy a tow truck, and then is not able to repay the loan because there are too many other folks with tow trucks (or for whatever other reason), why should that be my problem? I gave money with the expectation that it would be paid back. That is by definition what lending is, yet student loans are somehow touted as an exception where repayment shouldn't be seen as compulsory. |
|
The idea is that the lenders would stop lending to students who are likely to fail or who are studying something they won't be able to get a job in. The new reality would be: either study something with serious job opportunities, or pay out of pocket.