Monday, February 05, 2007
Nearly two-thirds of college students carry some type of debt. Late payments are also rising, as college students are suffering more than any other American. Nearly half of college students struggling with debt have stopped paying their debt(s), forcing lenders to "charge off" the debt and sell it to a collection agency.  If not that, then they are having their cars repossessed or they are seeking bankruptcy protection.

Over half of college students feel that they face tougher financial pressures than young people did in previous generations. About 30% of students frequently worry about their debt.  Although the percentage of people ages 22 to 29 with debt has declined, their total debt is up 10% from five years ago, to an average $16,120.  Every type of debt, from credit cards to college to personal loans, has risen.

Student-loan balances rose 16% to an average of $14,379; revolving debt, including credit cards, surged 24% to $5,781; and total installment debt, including student and personal loans, rose 4% to $17,208. The fastest-growing group of financially-troubled college students owes $20,000 or more in student-loan debt.

Debt has forced some young people to change their career plans. Of those surveyed, 22% say they've taken a job they otherwise wouldn't have because they needed more money to pay off student-loan debt. Three out of ten students have delayed or discontinued further education because they have too much debt already.  Of these college students, 26% have put off buying a home for the same reason, just as a smaller percentage say they've put off marrying (11%) or having children (14%).

2/5/2007 11:24:17 PM UTC  #    Comments [1]  |  Trackback
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