Is 30K on avg of student debt really a national problem? A lot of new cars fall into that range. Yet nobody is running around claiming cars are un-affordable and their owners are saddled with debt. 30K for a lifetime of much higher earnings seems like a pretty good value to me.
From what I can understand, that 30k average debt figure:
- Is voluntarily self-reported by universities, so may be a low estimate due to selection bias
- Doesn't include for-profit schools at all, who are well known to have higher tuitions and probably much less in the way of scholarships and grants
- As an average, is heavily skewed by the people who got partial or complete funding from somewhere else; great if you have it but you shouldn't take the number to mean that you can expect to owe $30k regardless of what you can pay upfront
- A lot of the debt these days is private and has high interest rates
- Car loans will actually likely deny you if they think you can't pay it back, at the very least you need some income stream to be approved
- It includes debt from graduating with associates degrees from much cheaper community colleges that are also much less useful for employment
Everyone who goes to college should pay very close attention to what their debt will be when they graduate (and even consider that they may not graduate when they think they will, or possibly not at all) and think very carefully about whether or not this is realistic. There need to be financial advisement services that do this if there aren't already (and if there, people need to start using them)