What Student Loans Are Really Used For: The Depressing Case Studies

Some of our readers may have missed our post from September 2012 in which we showed that far from being used for their generally accepted purpose, student loans – now well over $1 trillion and more than the total credit card debt outstanding – in numerous instances are instead abused to fund virtually everything else besides paying for tuition. Recall: “Robert Thomas Price Jr. borrowed about $105,000 for his tuition at Harrisburg Area Community College from 2005 and 2007, federal authorities say. It doesn’t cost anywhere near that much to study at HACC, though. So Price, 45, of Newport, is facing federal student loan fraud and mail fraud charges. A U.S. Middle District Court indictment alleges that Price spent much of the loan money on crack cocaine, cars, motorcycles, jewelry, tattoos and video games.

At the time many derided this case study as an isolated example of fund abuse by an isolated individual. Nearly two years later, a study by the WSJ confirms what most have known: far from an isolated incident, “student” loans have become a primary source of funding for an every greater portion of the US population, and that when looking at total credit creation in the US economy, non-revolving student debt has as much if not more relevance than mere revolving credit, when it comes to determining how pays for what.

The WSJ takes on a more conservative tone when it says that “some Americans caught in the weak job market are lining up for federal student aid, not for education that boosts their employment prospects but for the chance to take out low-cost loans, sometimes with little intention of getting a degree.”

Unfortunately, its examples demonstrate a pervasive culture of monetary abuse, which has become as rampant, if at a much lesser scale, as what the TBTF banks have been acused of doing in order to perpetuate the illusion that they are solvent – indirectly taking from taxpayers to fund an unsustainable lifestyle. Taxpayers, who will end up with massive losses on their involuntary “investment” in either case.

Take Ray Selent, a 30-year-old former retail clerk in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. He was unemployed in 2012 when he enrolled as a part-time student at Broward County’s community college. That allowed him to borrow thousands of dollars to pay rent to his mother, cover his cellphone bill and catch the occasional movie.

 

 

Tommie Matherne, a 32-year-old married father of five in Billings, Mont., has been going to school since 2010, when he realized the $10 an hour he was making as a mall security guard wasn’t covering his family’s expenses. He uses roughly $2,000 in student loans each year to stock his fridge and catch up on bills. His wife is a stay-at-home mother who also gets loans to take online courses.

 

We’ve been taking whatever we can for student loans every year, taking whatever we have left over and using it to stock up the freezer just so we have a couple extra months where we don’t have to worry about food,” says Mr. Matherne, who owes $51,600 in federal loans.

 

Some students end up going deeper into debt. Early last year, when Denna Merritt lost her long-term unemployment benefits, the 49-year-old Indianapolis woman enrolled part-time at the Art Institute of Pittsburgh’s online program, aiming for a degree in graphic design. She took out $15,000 in federal loans, $2,800 of which went to catch up on unpaid bills, including utilities, health-insurance premiums and cable.

 

“Obviously, it’s better not to use it that way if you can help it, because you’re just going to owe that much more later,” says Ms. Merritt, a former bookkeeper.

The logic for why “students” (or not) chose the easy way out? “The only way I feel I can survive financially is by going back to school and putting myself in more student debt,says Mr. Selent, who has since added $8,000 in student debt from living expenses. Returning to school also gave Mr. Selent a reprieve on the $400 a month he owed from previous student debt because the federal government doesn’t require payments while borrowers are in school.

In other words, running away from insolvency by adding on more debt. And not just any debt, but Federal debt, which has no liens on any assets, aside from converting the obligor into a non-dischargeable, indentured debt slave indefinitely, with wage garnishment rights afforded to the government. Of course, the borrowers know all about this, but that too is a bridge to be crossed in due course. For now, someone has to pay for the rent and the food, even if that someone is once again the US taxpayer.

Expect stories like these to continue. Here’s why:

College officials and federal watchdogs can’t say exactly how much of the U.S.’s swelling $1.1 trillion in student-loan debt has gone to living expenses. But data and government reports indicate the phenomenon is real. The Education Department’s inspector general warned last month that the rise of online education has led more students to borrow excessively for personal expenses. Its report said that among online programs at eight universities and colleges, non-education expenses such as rent, transportation and “miscellaneous” items made up more than half the costs covered by student aid.

 

The report also found the schools disbursed an average of $5,285 in loans each to more than 42,000 students who didn’t log any credits at the time. The report pointed to possible factors such as fraud in addition to cases of people enrolling without serious intentions of getting a degree.

 

Capella Education Co., which runs online schools, examined student costs and debt at institutions?public and private?in Minnesota and concluded that between a quarter and three-quarters of loans taken out by students were for non-education expenses. At one of Capella’s master’s programs, the typical graduate left with about $30,200 in student debt even though tuition, fees and book costs totaled roughly $18,800. Borrowers are prohibited under federal law, except in rare instances, from discharging student debt through bankruptcy.

 

The share of student borrowers taking out the maximum amount of loans—$12,500 a year for undergraduates—has risen since the recession. In the 2011-12 academic year, federal Education Department data show, 68% of all undergraduate borrowers hit the annual loan ceiling, up from 60% in 2008.

When one averages out the numbers, how many students are said to abuse their loans and use the proceeds to fund “other” uses? “About a quarter.”

Research suggests a fair chunk of that is going to non-education expenses. In 2011-12, about a quarter of student borrowers took out loans that exceeded their tuition, after grants, by $2,500, according to research by Mark Kantrowitz, a higher-education analyst and publisher of the education site Edvisors.com.

And the one take home paragraph that summarizes this latest capital misallocation clusterfuck which has Fed bailout written all over it:

Mr. Selent, of Fort Lauderdale, knows he is getting himself deeper in a hole but prefers that to the alternative of making minimum wage. In his 20s, he earned a bachelor’s degree in communications from a local for-profit school but couldn’t find a job in the field after graduating and began falling behind on his student-loan bills. He is now taking courses for a degree in theater so he can become an actor.

What else is there to add? Maybe just the chart of student debt.

 

And this chart, showing where all the newly created money is really going:


    



via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1dY8A6U Tyler Durden

Russia Today Anchor: What Russia Did in Ukraine Was Wrong

going to crimeaAbby Martin, an American anchor at the Russian
government-sponsored cable network Russia Today, slammed Russia’s
military intervention in the Ukrainian region of Crimea at the end
of her show last night. “What Russia did is wrong,” she told her
viewers, admitting she didn’t know as much as she should about the
history and cultural dynamics of the region, but that nevertheless
she did know that “military intervention is never the answer.”

In pointing out that American journalists and political
commentators who were some of the biggest cheerleaders for U.S.
intervention are now the loudest voices against Russian
intervention,
Glenn Greenwald notes
that Martin’s “unapologetic denunciation”
of the Russian invasion of Ukraine on an “unquestionably”
pro-Russian network doesn’t quite have a parallel in the U.S.
Writing at the Intercept, Greenwald asks:  “was there even a
single U.S. television host who said anything comparable to this in
the lead-up to, or the early stages of, the U.S. invasion of Iraq?”
If Pat Buchanan had a show in 2003, the answer is yes.
Nevertheless, Pat Buchanan is not representative of American media
culture or politics.

Russia Today responded to Martin’s segment, and the hoopla
surrounding it, by
insisting
it “doesn’t beat its journalists into submission” and
that they’re free to express their opinions, in private and on-air.
In its response, the network announced it would be sending Martin
to Crimea to “give her an opportunity to make up her own mind from
the epicentre of the story.”

Watch Martin’s segment below:

Disclosure: I’ve been
on

RT

several

times
and have no complaints about those appearances. If I only
appeared on media outlets I agree with 100 percent, or even just
most of the time, I probably wouldn’t appear anywhere.

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It Will Soon Be Legal to ‘Willfully Annoy’ People in Grand Rapids

Are you an obnoxious jerk who enjoys deliberately pissing people
off? Well, good news:
You are now legal in Grand Rapids, Michigan
. The city has
officially moved to decriminalize annoyingness.

Under current city code, “no person shall willfully annoy
another person” in Grand Rapids without facing consequences. The
Grand Rapids City Commission is now seeking to repeal the
38-year-old code because what constitutes “willfully annoying” is
“subject to a variety of interpretations.” City Attorney Catherine
Mish told The
Grand Rapids Press
 
the section was unconstitutionally
vague and “simply unenforceable.” 

It seems 2014 is shaping up to be a good year all around for
freedom of annoyingness. In January, the
British House of Lords voted against
 a clause imposing
sanctions on anyone in England and Wales engaging in “conduct
capable of causing nuisance or annoyance to any person.” And last
month the Indiana Court of Appeals ruled
that simply being drunk and annoying
wasn’t a crime. 

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Porn-Filter Policymaker Arrested on Kiddie-Porn Charges

That isn't a child-abuse image, it's an audience-abuse image.


No comment
:

A senior aide to [British Prime Minister] David Cameron
resigned from Downing Street last month the day before being
arrested on allegations relating to child abuse images.

Patrick Rock, who was involved in drawing up the government’s
policy for the large internet firms on online pornography filters,
resigned after No 10 was alerted to the allegations….

Rock helped to draw up government policy which led to the deal with
the internet giants on online filters. Under the deal, all
households connected to the internet will be contacted to be asked
if they would like the filters installed.

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The Debt Bubble Expands As Auto Loan Amounts Hit A New Record

Submitted by Mike Krieger via Liberty Blitzkrieg blog,

Is anyone surprised that the poorest and least credit worthy of Americans are being saddled with piles of debt in order to buy new cars? It’s not enough that a generation of our citizens will toil pointlessly to pay off more than $1 trillion of student loans, we may as well add some other form of debt burden on top of it.

It’s hard to even imagine this is happening so shortly after the last credit bubble train wreck, but happening it is. Creative ways for people to purchase cars they can’t afford have been on my radar screen for some time now, and if you recall, I posted an article last April titled: Just Keep Dancing: Introducing the 97-Month Auto Loan.

Well the dancing has continued, and now we have Americans borrowing at all-time record levels to buy cars. USA! USA!

From CNBC:

A combination of higher prices for new cars and relatively low rates for auto loans means Americans are borrowing a record amount to pay for their new rides.

 

According to Experian Automotive, which tracks millions of auto loans written each quarter, the average amount borrowed by car buyers last quarter climbed above $27,000 for the first time ever.

 

According to Experian, the average auto loan in fourth quarter 2013 was $27,430—an increase of $739 compared with the same period of 2012. The average used car loan was $345 higher, coming in at $17,974.

 

Those with non-prime credit ratings—or credit scores between 620 and 679—had the highest average auto loan. For these borrowers, the average new car loan rose more than $1,500, to a new high of $29,385.

 

Not surprisingly, those with subprime credit ratings—credit scores between 550 and 619—had the highest average monthly payment, of $499.

Yep, no doubt this will turn out just peachy.

The payments are rising despite an increasing number of car buyers opting to stretch their loans over six or seven years. According to Experian, a record 20 percent of all new car auto loans in the fourth quarter were more than six years in length.

 

J.D. Power said last week that February was on track to have one-third of new car auto loans last at least six years.

Oh, and in case you forgot, we are also bringing back subprime home loans.

Full article here.


    



via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1eRJzP3 Tyler Durden

Obama’s $3.9 Trillion Budget Predicts Fastest GDP Growth Since 2005

Having destroyed any credibility that this budget could possibly have yesterday, President Obama has outdone himself with the predictions in this $3.9 trillion budget

But apart from that, yeah, "nailed it"

As WSJ reports,

President Barack Obama proposed a $3.9 trillion budget package Tuesday peppered with new taxes on upper-income Americans and businesses, plus numerous spending initiatives aimed at bolstering education, research and low-income work programs.

 

The president's spending plan for the fiscal year that begins Oct. 1 doesn't rest on new or lofty policy goals, reflecting a town hibernating from budget exhaustion and girding for midterm elections in November. Instead, it offers targeted and familiar proposals, including an overhaul of corporate taxes, which it says would boost job growth and make U.S. businesses more competitive.

 

 

Many of the proposals are likely to meet a cool reception on Capitol Hill, where both parties are preparing for November elections that could change the balance of power on Capitol Hill.

As Bloomberg adds,

President Obama proposed raising $104b over next 10 yrs in his fiscal plan for 2015 with new restrictions and taxes on multinational cos. that weren’t included in last yr’s budget.

 

* Changes would affect digital goods, deductions for “excessive” interest and so-called hybrid arrangements that can lead to income not taxed in any country, according to budget; Obama also wants to make it harder for cos. to expatriate

 

* In all, Obama’s budget wants to raise $276b over next 10 yrs from international tax changes, 75% more than it sought last yr

 

* Wants to dedicate revenue to lowering corporate tax rate to 28%

 

 

 


    



via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1eRJAm0 Tyler Durden

Gene Healy on the Tea Party and Its Targets

Gene Healy reflects on the last five years of the
Tea Party, and suggests its poor choice of banner carriers helps
explain why the brand has suffered, and libertarian identification
with the movement has waned over time. Still whatever errors
they’ve made along the way, the Tea Partiers identified the right
target: our profligate political class. 

View this article.

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Official in Charge of Guidelines for British Internet Porn Filters Arrested on Child Porn Charges

Last summer, I wrote an article titled: How Internet in the UK is “Sleepwalking into Censorship.” That post detailed how plans in the UK to unveil default internet filters, sold to the public under the guise of “blocking child porn” and all sorts of other unethical and illegal activities, would actually provide a backdoor to censoring the internet.

Well it turns out it is even worse than that. Apparently, Patrick Rock, an official who helped draw up guidelines on Internet porn filters, has been arrested for child porn. You can’t make this stuff up.

From Raw Story:

A senior aide to British Prime Minister David Cameron has resigned after being arrested on suspicion of child pornography offenses, Downing Street confirmed Monday.

Patrick Rock, 62, was arrested by officers from the National Crime Agency last month.

continue reading

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John Kerry To Explain How Ukraine Is Fixed – Live Feed

Having "condemned Russia's incredible act of aggression" which markets now appear to have forgotten about, we wonder just what Secretary of State John Kerry will have to say in this speech. Markets appear to think it's all over and east and west Ukraine can all sing Kumbayah with Putin leading the melody but other leaders continue to call for "crushing" sanctions against Europe's largest gas supplier. We are sure Kerry will clear it all up and explain where the line that was not crossed is… and for goodness' sake don't mention the Russian boots on the ground in Crimea.

 

Group hug?

 

Mission Accomplished? Stocks at all time highs…

 

One wonders just what Victoria "Fuck The EU" Nuland whispered to Tymoshenko…

Live Feed (embed) via NBC

 

 

 

 

 


    



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Rand Paul Says He Believes in the “Historic and Religious” Definition of Marriage Between a Man and Woman, Kentucky AG Won’t Appeal Marriage Ruling

Kentucky Attorney General Jack Conway has said
that he will not appeal
a recent order
issued by U.S. District Judge John G. Heyburn II
directing Kentucky to recognize out of state same-sex marriages.
The order made official Heyburn’s previous Feb. 12 ruling.

After Heyburn’s order was issued Reason asked Sen. Rand
Paul (R-Ky.) to comment on the order. Paul’s response below:

I believe in the historic and religious definition of marriage.
I also believe this power belongs to the states and the people, not
the federal government. It is illegitimate for the federal courts
to intrude here.

Kentucky Governor Steve Beshear (D) has responded to Conway’s
comments. From the
Associated Press
:

Kentucky Gov. Steve Beshear says the state will hire outside
attorneys to appeal a judge’s decision granting legal recognition
to same-sex couples married in other states and countries.

Head over to
Reason 24/7
for recent news on gay marriage. More from
Reason.com on gay marriage here.

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