Houston Chronicle Sunday

Parent PLUS borrowers sap retirement to pay for college

- By Bob Fernandez and Erin Arvedlund

One in four American parents who borrowed from the federal government to help pay for a child’s college education don’t expect to retire as planned because of the debt, a survey to be released Tuesday says.

And one in five parent borrowers regret taking out the loans, the NerdWallet survey shows.

“Parents take on whatever it takes to get their kids at college, including taking on unaffordab­le debt,” said Anna Helhoski, student loan expert at NerdWallet, a personal finance website based in San Francisco. Of the total $1.6 trillion in student loan debt, Americans borrowed roughly $103 billion in PLUS loans as of the second quarter of 2021.

There are 3.6 million Parent Plus borrowers, and the average loan totals more than $28,000.

But parents borrowing for children’s college education are stealing future retirement dollars to help fund college, NerdWallet warned.

One in three who borrowed under the government’s Parent PLUS loans say they’re counting on forgivenes­s to help wipe out a large portion of their debt.

The government recently opted to extend collection actions on defaulted loans for four more months, until Jan. 31, 2022. But officials say that forbearanc­e is unlikely to be offered again. “The payment pause has benefited parents, but it’s going to end. A great deal of them aren’t going to be ready,” Helhoski said.

As for a larger debt amnesty, “counting on forgivenes­s is a mistake. They’re hearing about it in headlines. There’s hope there, but there’s no legislatio­n currently. President Biden hasn’t committed to broad forgivenes­s,” Helhoski added.

Other studies support the study by NerdWallet.

An October 2020 JPMorgan Chase report that analyzed the student loan debt of more than 300,000 Chase Bank customers found that “almost 40 percent of individual­s involved in student loan repayment are helping someone else pay off their student loan debt.”

A 2017 AARP survey of more than 3,000 adults found that a quarter of private student loan co-signers aged 50 and older had to make a loan payment because

the student borrower failed to do so.

While college students have borrowed heavily for their schooling, parents also borrow heavily to help their children, thus burdening two generation­s with debt.

“Not only is their child going into debt, they are also going into debt,” said Anthony “Tony” D’Angelo, the executive producer for Collegiate Empowermen­t, a nonprofit educationa­l firm.

Because of the climbing cost of post-secondary education, and the easily available financing for those college degrees, D’Angelo compares college debt to the sub-prime housing market, which was fueled by easy-to-get mortgages and constantly higher real estate prices.

“At least you owned a shack in Miami,” D’Angelo said of the housing crash. “Now you have a kid with a sociology degree with a job in Starbucks with a tip jar.”

NerdWallet found that student loan debt is affecting families across multiple life stages: young adults burdened with debt as they try to build their lives; others near retirement who see their financial lives upended; and retirement-aged parents and grandparen­ts who took out loans to help a loved one get through school.

Federal Parent PLUS loans can carry higher fees than private student loans, according to PayForEd.com, a consulting firm tracking the student loan industry. Many parents also do not understand that a PLUS loan is legally their responsibi­lity and not the student’s.

Parent PLUS loans have a standard interest rate for all borrowers establishe­d each May, which goes into effect each July 1. The 2021-22 federal parent PLUS rate is 6.28 percent. The parent PLUS loan originatio­n fees can be also higher than private loans, according to PayForEd.com.

Fred Amrein, CEO of PayforEd.com, which has developed digital tools to help families to navigate college costs, said that “people over 50 are the fastest growing debt borrowers.”

 ?? Lynne Sladky / Associated Press ?? Students head to class at Miami Dade College in 2018 in Miami. Many parents have borrowed to help their kids pay for college.
Lynne Sladky / Associated Press Students head to class at Miami Dade College in 2018 in Miami. Many parents have borrowed to help their kids pay for college.

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