Student Loans: Will Millennials Ever Get Out of the Lurch?

Student Loans: Will Millennials Ever Get Out of the Lurch?

Student Loans: Will Millennials Ever Get Out of the Lurch?

The trillion-dollar mess of student loans has been a political football for years.  Forgive and forget was never part of the loan agreement, as evidenced by changes to the bankruptcy code, limiting one’s ability to purge the liability from a student (or parent’s) budget.  In 1987., according to the Student Loan Borrower Assistance site:

However, the non-dischargability of student loans through bankruptcy receives plenty of media attention.  As NPR noted,  with an example of “Lauren.”

The topic of student loan bankruptcy will likely accelerate as President Biden indicated a shift, as CNBC reported.

While students (now graduates) face financial challenges in repaying their loans, the payments industry needs to watch the decrease in borrowing habits caused by overloaded debt burdens.  The CARD Act of 2009 severely limited a college student’s ability to borrow without a parental sponsor.  With lower credit scores and student debt that will not go away quickly, there is another problem.

According to the Federal Reserve, household debt owed by those older than 70 years old is outpacing those aged 18 and 25.  This means that the feeder group for new credit accounts is failing, which requires credit card issuers to review their strategies and normalize their approach through the next decade.

Overview provided by Brian Riley, Director, Credit Advisory Service at Mercator Advisory Group

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