iPhone app iPad app Android phone app Android tablet app More

Student Loans: The Next Bubble?

By JUSTIN POPE   11/ 6/11 02:41 PM ET   AP

-- First the dot.coms popped, then mortgages. Are student loans and higher education the next bubble, the latest investment craze inflating on borrowed money and misplaced faith it can never go bad?

Some experts have raised the possibility. Last summer, Moody's Analytics pronounced fears of an education spending bubble "not without merit." Last spring, investor and PayPal founder Peter Thiel called attention to his claims of an education bubble by awarding two dozen young entrepreneurs $100,000 each NOT to attend college.

Recent weeks have seen another spate of "bubble" headlines – student loan defaults up, tuition rising another 8.3 percent this year and finally, out Thursday, a new report estimating that average student debt for borrowers from the college class of 2010 has passed $25,000. And all that on top of a multi-year slump in the job-market for new college graduates.

So do those who warn of a bubble have a case?

The hard part, of course, is that a bubble is never apparent until it bursts. But the short answer is this: There are worrisome trends. A degree is an asset whose value can change over time. Borrowing to pay for it is risky, and borrowing is way up. The stakes are high. You can usually walk away from a house. Not so a student loan, which can't even be discharged in bankruptcy.

But there are also important differences between a potential "student loan bubble" and an "education bubble." Furthermore, many economists think the whole concept of a bubble is a misleading way to think about what's happening, and may actually distract from the real problems. College affordability is a serious issue, but it's a different one. Borrowing for college and borrowing for, say, a house, are fundamentally different in important ways.

To be sure, there are some classic bubble warning signs:

_Everybody wants in. The idea that higher education is the only way to get ahead has become widely held. College enrollment has surged one-third in a decade. With rising demand, college tuition and fees have more than doubled over that time, outstripping inflation in every other major sector of the economy – energy, health care and housing, even when housing was bubbling itself.

_Those bills are paid with borrowed money. The volume of outstanding student loans is rising rapidly and now exceeds credit card debt, though recent reports of it crossing $1 trillion may be premature. Moody's Analytics puts the number at around $750 billion. But while credit card debt is declining, student loan debt keeps going up.

_Just like housing, many student loans were made with little or no research into whether borrowers were fit. Federal Stafford loans are basically automatic for college students, and government backing for other types of loans gave other student lenders little reason to be picky.

_Defaults on federal student loans jumped from 7 percent to 8.8 percent in the most recent fiscal year. That measures just recent borrowers who were already behind within two years of their first payments coming due.

Those numbers are all alarming. But putting them in context requires thinking separately about the ideas of a "student loan bubble" and an "education bubble."

First, one thing that's important about the possible student loan bubble is that it poses much less of a threat than housing debt did to drag down the entire economy. Yes, many individual borrowers may find themselves in trouble. But total student loans probably amount to less than 10 percent of outstanding mortgages. Every single student loan could default and it still probably wouldn't match total mortgage defaults during the recent downturn. More importantly, unlike mortgages, Wall Street isn't knee-deep in securities comprised of bundled student loans, as it was with mortgages. (It also helps that it's also harder to speculate in student loans; an investor can flip a house, but not a brain.)

The other big difference with student loans is the dominant role the federal government has assumed in the market in the last few years: it accounts for roughly 85 percent of student debt.

That matters for several reasons.

First, the government is answerable to voters and not shareholders, so it's more likely than private investors to take steps such as those announced by President Barack Obama to try to relieve student debt burdens.

Second, notes Mark Kantrowitz of the website Finaid.org, it's important to remember what actually causes a bubble to burst. It's not simply a run-up in prices. What bursts the bubble is a liquidity crisis, when borrowers suddenly can't get the money they need. Even during the depths of the 2008 financial crisis, when private student loans dried up, the government's dominant role kept student loans flowing.

That doesn't guarantee the bubble won't slowly and painfully deflate over time. But it insures against the chaos of a "crash" where suddenly students can't get loans at all – a scenario that could shut down untold numbers of colleges whose students rely on financial aid.

None of that, however, changes the fundamental risk for individual student borrowers: they could borrow heavily to pay for a college education and find the return much less than expected.

It's here, looking at the debate from an individual borrower's point of view as opposed to the entire economy, that the debate over the term "bubble" gets tricky. Can an education lose value?

Certainly a college degree can.

A key measure is the wage premium for bachelor's degree recipients over those with just high school diploma, and there are various ways to measure it. All show the wage premium is substantial, though after rising steadily for years it appears to have slipped some lately. Wages for the median bachelor's degree recipient are roughly $55,292, compared to $34,813 for those with only high school, according to the latest data from Georgetown University's Center on Education and the Workforce.

That reflects a premium that has fallen from roughly 67 percent a few years ago to 59 percent (the latest Bureau of Labor Statistics data put the 2010 premium at 65 percent for weekly wages). Still, all told, estimates for the lifetime earnings advantage of a college degree range from a conservative $500,000 to more than $1 million, according to the Census Bureau. Even with recent price increases, for the average student loan borrower that remains a very high return on investment.

It's true the unemployment rate for new college graduates is more than 10 percent. But unemployment for college graduates overall is 4.2 percent, compared to 9.7 percent for those with a high school degree.

Could college prices rise so much, and the premium fall so far, that a degree is no longer worth it? Of course, for some degrees. But in a modern economy, it's difficult to imagine that happening across the board. Here's where a degree is truly unlike other assets – most should correlate at least somewhat with skills that are useful in the world. Particular degrees may prove bad bets, but to imagine the premium on education itself dropping off a cliff is to imagine a world where things have gone so wrong that job skills no longer matter.

Or, as Kent Smetters, an economist at the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School, puts it: "In that case, nobody's worried about paying back their loans. Everyone's heading for bunkers in Idaho and canned goods and that kind of stuff."

Here's the rub: Nobody earns a generic "college degree." Degrees are earned from different schools, with different reputations, and in different majors with much different payoffs. What counts most, says Georgetown's Anthony Carnevale, are the courses you take and your major. Roughly 30 percent of associate's degree recipients earn more than people with bachelor's degrees. A graduate with a mere certificate in engineering will earn roughly 20 percent more than the average bachelor's recipient.

That suggests there isn't one big bubble, but many smaller but significant ones stretching across different sectors – certain liberal arts grads, artists, lawyers who borrow six figures for law school and can't find a job, and students at for-profit colleges. The signs of a bubble at for-profits are unmistakable: Enrollment has tripled in a decade, roughly 96 percent of graduates have loans and borrowing is substantially higher than at other types of institutions. Default rates recently jumped to 15 percent.

But what's most important is the huge numbers who never earn a degree at all. At community colleges and for-profit schools, roughly one in five aiming for a bachelor's degree fail to secure it. Even at four-year public universities, the failure rate within six years is almost half. Anyone who borrows a large amount of money and then fails to complete a degree is in a world of hurt – quite possibly worse off than if they'd never even tried to go to college in the first place.

FOLLOW HUFFPOST COLLEGE

-- First the dot.coms popped, then mortgages. Are student loans and higher education the next bubble, the latest investment craze inflating on borrowed money and misplaced faith it can never go bad? ...
-- First the dot.coms popped, then mortgages. Are student loans and higher education the next bubble, the latest investment craze inflating on borrowed money and misplaced faith it can never go bad? ...
Filed by Leah Finnegan  | 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 1,559
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2 3 4 5  Next ›  Last »  (27 total)
06:03 PM on 11/17/2011
Only a few brave souls dare to suggest that a college education is not worth the cost. Tony Hseih said in a recent interview that any young person with an entrepreneurial leaning should save the money and invest it in his/her business. Peter Thiel went even further by awarding "reverse scholarships". No one does a cost/benefit analysis before applying for those loans, assuming that conventional wisdom is correct - that the only way to have a good life now is via a college degree. I'm glad I had the opportunity, but that was in a different world and time.
On a parallel note, employers are now requesting college degrees for jobs that absolutely do not require it. "That's some catch, that Catch 22."
11:30 PM on 11/09/2011
Yup! I can name 20 kids with at least 100k in loans and no job ....
photo
SF TKF
Cthulhu thinks you'd make a nice sandwich.
12:14 PM on 11/08/2011
How can they be a bubble? There’s no way to get out of them. You can’t declare bankruptcy and walk away. Defaulting simply means your pay, as soon as you get a job, will be garnished.
11:32 PM on 11/09/2011
well with the new social class, "long-term educated/unemployed", some will never be able to pay. In the long haul, the negative deliquicenies will weaken America's financial structure's whenever it tries to recover ..
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Reikoku Jaken
My economic philosophy? Pragmatism
09:05 AM on 11/08/2011
Is it growing faster than the GDP?
Is it growing faster than real incomes?
Is it growing faster than the CPI?
Is it producing good real returns for the investors?

There ya go, that should help narrow it down a bit.
10:34 PM on 11/07/2011
There are schools, which are running over graveyards.
http://goo.gl/0yIiY
04:11 PM on 11/07/2011
The present situation doesn't seem optimistic. So, what should students really do? Don't take loans? Don't go to college? Shall the government take some actions about it? What's the way out? Steve from www.essaytask.com
05:26 PM on 11/07/2011
A temporary federal student loan interest holiday would cost $0. It would provide money that low volume borrowers could use to stimulate the economy, while providing high volume borrowers an opportunity to make more than mere interest payments. Those who did not borrow loans would not be missing on anything.
07:43 AM on 11/08/2011
I see! Thanks for the comment. Steve from www.essaytask.com
03:59 PM on 11/07/2011
Yes it is hard to be a student and succeed in this world of ours. However we have new "trend" some students borrowing money to attend the college, after a year or two they quit the college declared to be too stressful they go see doctor "a crook" they applied for Social Security and got disability. So they get the grant from Government student loan and disability stay home and play with their Girlfriends’. Hooray for US System
09:20 AM on 11/09/2011
Right on--have a tenant who lives quite well on that, on grants and on DHS for her son who is
severely mentally challenged as well as physical. She is about 39 with a daughter in college, the son she sneaked in who is prone to violent incidents and should be in supervised facility but that would mean less $$ for her. Just found out he gets drugged up at night and she has a boyfriend come in. I think she even goes out. She leaves him(14) and a younger girl. Also has another younger boy who lives who knows where but appears now and again-supposedly he has melanomas. She how ever is in the best of health-has had work and very nice crowns. I never have thought a kid would be better under DHS but not so sure now. Am torn about contacting them but I think this is a dangerous situation! Anyway she is doing good and wears very nice clothes. Hate to call DHS.These women have kids to get on the gravy train and then their kids' fathers have to pay and pay and end up being dead beat dads because of they feel hopeless than they finally end up in the system and we all pay again-either for jail or SSD.....
01:56 AM on 12/30/2011
If you think this is dangerous enough to write about here then you should call your states Child Protective Services. In the State of Washington a person not calling but being aware of the situation can be fined for not reporting. But be careful false claims made can also result in fines and lawsuits. We are all mandatory reporters.
03:58 PM on 11/07/2011
Yes, and they are another government encouraged and backed up mess. The government is our worst enemy. The student loans that are backed up by taxpayer money are more risky than the government backed investments like Solyndra! For one thing, there has been no government regulation on what type of education these loans were given for. As a result, we have "professional students" who have borrowed to the max and produced worthless degrees in subjects that there will never be a market for. And then the so called "students" complian to the government that they are in debit up to their eyeballs and can't find a job in their field of "Underwater Basket Weaving".
11:37 PM on 11/09/2011
Well said ..As much as our society push the education card, they fell to report(lexis...)
25% of all college grads find jobs of their choice
20% are working for the same wages as high school grads are (as early as the 1990's this was reported)
15% were working jobs that are either part-tome or volunteer positions
and the reminder % were not accounted for ...

Tally up all those #'s and what you get is , a 25% chance that you will graduated and land a job that pay liable wages ...Whats the point of taking out all those loans for a 25% shot?
03:14 PM on 11/07/2011
How many more bubbles do we have left to pop?
Allthosewhowander
My micro-bio is a microclimate
11:12 PM on 11/07/2011
Have you ever tried to count the bubbles on bubble wrap?
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
quillerm
01:17 PM on 11/07/2011
What the US needs is highly trained craftsman not more college kids with general business and liberal arts degrees. We have millions of kids with Business degrees that end up mid level paper pushers for businesses which should be filled with highly skilled craftsman. We need to demand more in how homes are constructed in America, the compressed sawdust homes of today are built with a 30-40 year life. We need homes like those in Europe that last 100-150 years. Homes that won't make our cities and towns look like slums in 30 years. Yes, they will cost more, but skilled laborers deserve a good wage. We also need to ensure that Corporations and businesses show a commitment to our towns, those that move overseas must pay the price. Any company that moves overseas must be prohibited from selling goods in the US for a decade.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
quillerm
01:07 PM on 11/07/2011
Colleges run up costs by creating classes that are politically correct but useless in the real world. What the heck are 'Women's Studies'? We don't have 'Men's Studies'. It's time for universities to cut their bloated budgets and start cutting the six-figure salaries for professors and teachers. Dumping millions into athletic programs would be great if ticket sales offset the expenditure. Wasting millions on Women's sports programs that don't offer a return in income are a needless drain on College's. If the government mandates equal expenditures on college sports than government (taxpayers) must pay for it. Don't dump the costs on colleges and students in the form of tuition.
03:02 PM on 11/07/2011
Thats like saying, Hey, why dont we have White People Studies Majors!! Because.... thats the DOMINANT culture already... we alreadyy know all about that! Men run things, and we see everything thru their viewpoint, even most movies and such are made from a men's perspective. Women have been silenced and subjugated throughout history.
Though I know I'm wasting my time, someone who understood history wouldn't make this silly post.
03:40 PM on 11/07/2011
I enjoyed your post a lot! Fanned and faved! But you're right that you're probably wasting time on trying to convince quillerm. :-)
09:29 AM on 11/08/2011
Most college professors are not making six figure salaries. For sure money is not being spent correctly at many colleges but in the majority of cases it is not going towards the faculty or any aspect of teaching.
02:29 PM on 11/08/2011
Exactly. The money goes to administrator's salaries, coaches salaries, and things that keep the buildings intact.
12:50 PM on 11/07/2011
I am still in college and I support financial aide but you should only get it if you are a legal citizen! We the people cannot pay for someone who is not legal.Go to your own country then! We have laws for reasons. I do think that the pell grant which I have should be limited to 41/2 years. It takes 4 years to get your bachelors but you have a half a semester just in case crap happens. Though if your parents paid your first 4 years and you need help after that then that is fine. The taxpayers should not have to give free money for over 41/2 years. However, in 2006 Boehner and many other congressional leaders decided to deregulate a law for for-profit schools into letting more people in. It was originally only 50% but leave it to those special interest groups to get what they want.and screw the system and now here we are. ILLEGALS, DE-REGULATIONS, AND SPECIAL INTEREST GROUPS. SURPRISE SURPRISE....
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
quillerm
01:30 PM on 11/07/2011
But democrats want free college for not only Illegals but everyone who wants an education. They don't discuss the costs to taxpayers because the bill is over one trillion dollars. Democrats need Illegals for Votes they could care less about US citizens or taxpayers. It's like the OWS mobs, mostly kids in college, with parents paying the bills. Occupy London mobs were filled with 11-12 year olds just out for a good time, playing in the streets.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Shifu
Train and be ready
01:59 PM on 11/07/2011
What a silly rant. Why would Democrats want Illegals for votes when illegals don,t vote?
Allthosewhowander
My micro-bio is a microclimate
11:15 PM on 11/07/2011
Yeah! You tell him. Those awful liberal democrats. That guy Rick Perry wanting to GIVE away free college to illegals. Oh, wait a minute...
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
spriddler
12:40 PM on 11/07/2011
I don't get why people are not protesting university fees. When higher education inflation out paces healthcare inflation over a decade something is grossly amiss. At least with healthcare inflation you get new technologies and new medications. You are also dealing with an ageing population that wants and needs more services and care. I don't see any similar justifications for the increase in tuition other than receding state support at public universities. That is only a partial justification though and does not address the mirror rise in private university tuition.
Satirist1
All 4 d best in the best of all possible worlds
11:49 AM on 11/07/2011
B.Franklin. Only two things are certain in life-- d e a t h and taxes.
Wrong Benjie !
You obviously never took out a Stafford loan!
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
quillerm
01:20 PM on 11/07/2011
To many people take out loans without a down payment. They don't have a stake in the transacton. Increase down payment rules to 25%. That will force students to work for part of their college loan and take a larger stake in paying it off.
Satirist1
All 4 d best in the best of all possible worlds
01:35 PM on 11/07/2011
In most civilized countries higher educaiton is affordable or free.

In U.S. students loans are propping up a frankly barbaric system of subsidizing universities with bloated bureaucracies and trustee boards.
This unconscionable system has already resulted in a drastic reduction of American scientific and academic potential.
03:04 PM on 11/07/2011
It isnt a HOUSE. The only reason the cost went up to that level is corruption by Sallie Mae and congress, and colleges inflating the cost as more kids had more loan money available.
11:47 AM on 11/07/2011
College and Trade Schools should be FREE.
12:00 PM on 11/07/2011
Lear Jets and Bentleys should be FREE
12:30 PM on 11/07/2011
Actually industrial robots should make that possible. LOL We should have been on a 3-day work week by the 80s. But we have economists with college degrees who have been ignoring Demand Side Depreciation since WWII. Can't do algebra.

There were 200,000,000 cars in the US in 1995. How much do Americans lose on the depreciation of automobiles every year? If college graduates are so smart why don't they all know about planned obsolescence?

A good National Recommended Reading List should have made real education very cheap long ago. Instead the schools are selling credentials. Haven't you met dummies with college degrees?
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
quillerm
01:20 PM on 11/07/2011
Nothing is free, taxpayers are fitting the bill. Guess what Mr. Taxpayer, you will get the bill.
07:20 PM on 11/08/2011
Nothing wrong with taxpayers supporting an educated citizenry...nothing at all, unless you want a Nation of Sheep.

Better on education for the masses, than military for nothing.