Porterville Recorder

Student loan debt: It isn’t just for millennial­s

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I t’s no secret that today’s college graduates face record amounts of debt. Approximat­ely 68 percent of the graduating class of 2015 had student loan debt, with an average debt of $30,100 per borrower — a 4 percent increase from 2014 graduates, according to the Institute for College Access and Success.

A student loan debt clock at finaid.org estimates current outstandin­g student loan debt — including both federal and private student loans — at over $1.4 trillion. But it’s not just millennial­s who are racking up this debt. According to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), although most student loan borrowers are young adults between the ages of 18 and 39, consumers age 60 and older are the fastestgro­wing segment of the student loan market, according to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.

Rise of student debt among older Americans

Between 2005 and 2015, the number of individual­s age 60 and older with student loan debt quadrupled from about 700,000 to 2.8 million. The average amount of student loan debt owed by these older borrowers also increased from $12,100 to $23,500 over this period, according to the CFPB.

The reason for this trend is twofold: Borrowers are carrying their own student loan debt later in life (27 percent of cases), and they are taking out loans to finance their children’s and grandchild­ren’s college education (73 percent of cases), either directly or by co-signing a loan with the student as the primary borrower, according to the CFPB. Under the federal government’s Direct Stafford Loan program, the maximum amount that undergradu­ate students can borrow over four years is $27,000 — an amount that is often inadequate to meet the full cost of college. This limit causes many parents to turn to private student loans, which generally require a co-signer or coborrower, who is then held responsibl­e for repaying the loan along with the student, who is the primary borrower. The CFPB estimates that 57 percent of all individual­s who are co-signers are age 55 and older.

What’s at stake

The increasing student loan debt burden of older Americans has serious implicatio­ns for their financial security. In 2015, 37 percent of federal student loan borrowers age 65 and older were in default on their loans, according to the CFPB. Unfortunat­ely for these individual­s, federal student loans generally cannot be discharged in bankruptcy, and Uncle Sam can and will get its money — the government is authorized to withhold a portion of a borrower’s tax refund or Social Security benefits to collect on the debt. (By contrast, private student loan lenders cannot intercept tax refunds or Social Security benefits to collect any amounts owed to them.)

The CFPB also found that older Americans with student loans (federal or private) have saved less for retirement and often forgo necessary medical care at a higher rate than individual­s without student loans, according to the CFPB. It all adds up to a tough situation for older Americans, whose income stream is typically ramping down, not up, unlike their younger counterpar­ts.

Think before you borrow

Since the majority of older Americans are incurring student loan debt to finance a child’s or grandchild’s college education, how much is too much to borrow? It’s different for every family, but one general guideline is that a student’s overall debt shouldn’t be more than his or her projected annual starting salary, which in turn often depends on the student’s major and job prospects. But this is just a guideline. Many variables can impact a borrower’s ability to pay back loans, and many families have been burned by borrowing amounts that may have seemed reasonable at first glance but now, in reality, are not.

A recent survey found that 57 percent of millennial­s regret how much they borrowed for college, according to the Journal of Financial Planning. This doesn’t mean they regretted going to college or borrowing at all, but it suggests that it would be wise to carefully consider the amount of any loans you or your child take out for college. Establish a conservati­ve borrowing amount, and then try to borrow even less.

If the numbers don’t add up, students can reduce the cost of college by choosing a less expensive school, living at home or becoming a resident assistant (RA) to save on room costs, or graduating in three years instead of four.

Jenny M. Powell, CFP is an independen­t financial adviser with Raymond James Financial Services Inc. She can be reached at 429-4270, jenny.powell@raymondjam­es.com/visalia. The Visalia branch offfice is located at 303 E. Caldwell Ave.

 ??  ?? Financial Adviser JENNY POWELL
Financial Adviser JENNY POWELL

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