Originally posted by Reddrocket07
View Post
top Ad Widget
Collapse
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
The Truth About Student Loans
Collapse
X
-
Originally posted by Postbankrupt View PostThis is so unfair. Schools encourage students to take out the maximum amount and then once they graduate they cannot find the jobs to repay them. Congress needs to allow student loans to be discharged in bk. $1 trillion in student loan debt in this country-don't you think that's a problem???
If you go in for $200,000 to get a master of divinity at Harvard, what's the liklihood that you'll ever be able to pay it back? Why does everyone except the government bureaucrats setting the standards for making the loans, know the answer to this question?Pay no attention to anything I post. I graduated last in my class from a fly-by-night law school that no longer exists; I never studied or went to class; and I only post on internet forums when I'm too drunk to crawl away from the computer.
Comment
-
Originally posted by joshuagraham View PostBut those folks will *eventually* go through probate, so if there is anything in cupboard, the creditors will get to confiscate it - and by that time, the magic of compound interest (and fees) will make the debt larger than any regular person's estate.
I wonder, though, if a 401K or IRA of a student debtor going to a beneficiary would be confiscated.Pay no attention to anything I post. I graduated last in my class from a fly-by-night law school that no longer exists; I never studied or went to class; and I only post on internet forums when I'm too drunk to crawl away from the computer.
Comment
-
Originally posted by MSbklawyer View PostIf I'm not mistaken, student loans are discharged at death. They can't go after the estate's assets.
Comment
-
Question... We are converting from a 13 to a 7 and we go to court on the 15th. I know we had to list all debt in our bankruptcy, including our student loans, but I'm curious about something... on the Periodic Debtor Report that lists where our payments went in payback to our credits over the last year, there are two lines for the US Department of Education, Claim #38 and Claim #50. The class on both of them are listed as Student Loan, but on one, it lists under the Scheduled or Allowed column $20,537.00. The Claim Amount is $30,136.24. Under the Amount Paid is $245.99. The other has $0 for Scheduled or Allowed, but under the Claim Amount is $20,769.85. The Amount Paid is $169.53. So.... were these included in our bankruptcy then? Are they going to be discharged when it converts? I've asked my lawyer, but no response yet, so I was curious... :-)Last edited by wikkibird; 10-09-2012, 11:24 AM.
Comment
-
Originally posted by MSbklawyer View PostIf I'm not mistaken, student loans are discharged at death. They can't go after the estate's assets.
The case against student loans widens following the tale of one family who battled a bank in the wake of their daughter's death. After the passing of
It wouldn't make sense that a student loan, which is harder to discharge than a regular loan, would be easier to avoid in probate.
Comment
-
Statistics are misleading
The percentage of discharges is low because the percentage of people that proactively file the appropriate adversary paperwork to get their loan discharged is low. The media has done a good job in making people think their loan will never get discharged so only a small miniscule percentage actually try.
Comment
-
Originally posted by royalkingYes it true but if students choose a reliable lender for taking a loan then it can not be a very difficult task. Reliable lender always try to present easy terms.
Comment
-
Exactly bcohen - I feel like at least with a personal (non-education) loan you would actually have something tangible after taking out the loan (ie car, vacation, home repairs). With these private student loans, you really don't get anything you can see or enjoy especially since the job market is so bad you can't even look at your piece of paper on the wall of your cubicle and think, "Man, I'm sure glad I went to college so I can have this job." It's more like, I hope this thing burns when I run out of heat this winter because the job I have only pays the rent.
I also feel like colleges are bordering on fraud when their purpose of being is all about providing an avenue to a good job and then you complete whatever they say is required, money, passing tests, taking all those classes that are mandatory but unrelated to your field of study and then you get out and what you worked for doesn't exist. It's like hiring a company to educate you for the purpose of training you for something other than a job you could have got without the degree. And I just don't see that as happening in most cases any more.
Comment
bottom Ad Widget
Collapse
Comment