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- May 15, 2021
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Thoughts on the 10k debt relief? Sadly, many DPMs will qualify for this because they make under 125k...
Is it going to apply to us? The reports I read are all vague, but I know previous debt cancellation proposals were only for undergraduate loans.
"Don't worry about the tuition increase, you're going to get a job paying 250k after residency and the government will cancel your loans anyways!"Prediction: all pod schools increase their prices by 10k next year
Give me one instance in which privatizing a sector has lowered prices.They are buying votes. This doesn’t do anything to solve the “student loan crisis,” ie tuition for useless degrees that stupid people took out loans for.
Gov needs to get out of all undergrad loans. Watch tuition prices fall. Honestly they should get out of grad school loans too. High paying degrees like medicine will still have private banks lining up to loan money. Interest rates for things like law school and podiatry school will be higher (and loans in general could be harder to get) which would hopefully mean less applicants and graduates. It’s a win win all around when you think about it.
The 10k forgiveness doesn’t do a whole lot for us, but if you’re going the IDR-and-forgiveness route like myself, the new IDR plan can potentially help quite a bit.Thoughts on the 10k debt relief? Sadly, many DPMs will qualify for this because they make under 125k...
Give me one instance in which privatizing a sector has lowered prices.
I'm almost certain this wouldn't apply if you refinanced and your loans are held privately...I assume they had to be federal when opened correct? Like you refinanced to private but this are still eligible? In the before times unless you were going for PSLF keeping federal rates was crazy.
It’s a little late for me. I just finished by 10 years. Waiting to get the forgiveness.The 10k forgiveness doesn’t do a whole lot for us, but if you’re going the IDR-and-forgiveness route like myself, the new IDR plan can potentially help quite a bit.
Biden's Huge Plan for Student Loan Cancellation and Forgiveness
President Biden is forgiving hundreds of billions of dollars in student loans. It's just not the straight cancellation way he proposed.www.studentloanplanner.com
I just read this--how does it help if your loans are all graduate loans? Payment is still 10% of discretionary income, and if you're getting the loans forgiven down the road anyways who cares what kind of interest accrues?The 10k forgiveness doesn’t do a whole lot for us, but if you’re going the IDR-and-forgiveness route like myself, the new IDR plan can potentially help quite a bit.
Biden's Huge Plan for Student Loan Cancellation and Forgiveness
President Biden is forgiving hundreds of billions of dollars in student loans. It's just not the straight cancellation way he proposed.www.studentloanplanner.com
Student debt is debt that cannot be discharged through bankruptcy or basically any reason other than becoming a quadriplegic or dying. Give private lenders the chance to lend with basically no way out of a loan other than death, and they will exploit the hell out of it, I guarantee you. People will pursue high cost/high income degrees as long as they continue to yield a high income, just as they are now. It doesn't matter if the lender is private or public. I don't buy your argument that the market will set the price of degrees itself through private lenders. At the end of the day, working a $200-300k/yr job with $300k in student debt is still more financially beneficial than working a minimum wage job for the rest of your life.You can’t raise the price on a product people aren’t buying. And even if tuition continued to increase for engineering majors, overall college expenditures/loans would fall when you either had to pay for your communications degree or just not go to college. But you’re asking the wrong question. College was always going to cost more today than it did 20 years ago. But would it have increased at the rate in which it has without essentially unlimited federally guaranteed student loans? If you think the answer to that is yes, you are an idiot. No offense. The mortgage crisis in 2008 should have taught everyone that. You can’t give people cheap or free money who are a job change away from not being able to afford it. Just like you can’t loan someone $200k for a degree that leads to a $40k job as a social worker. If the private sector or Universities themselves were on the hook for defaults, tuition prices would have risen with inflation but never have outpaced it by a few hundred %. Gender studies degrees might not even exist anymore outside of a few universities. Colleges and degree programs would be consolidated amongst various state schools which would lower overhead.
Only federal loans qualify, no private loans. Refinanced loans do not qualify either. Never refinance to a private lender if you're pursuing any sort of forgiveness plan.I assume they had to be federal when opened correct? Like you refinanced to private but this are still eligible? In the before times unless you were going for PSLF keeping federal rates was crazy.
It can potentially lower that 10% depending on the ratio of undergrad to grad loans. If all your loans are grad loans, it doesn't do much for you. I have both, so it can help me a little bit.I just read this--how does it help if your loans are all graduate loans? Payment is still 10% of discretionary income, and if you're getting the loans forgiven down the road anyways who cares what kind of interest accrues?
Correct. As has been previously discussed, PSLF is basically impossible for 98 percent of podiatrists....refinanced my a few different times. Last 2 years have been. Around 0.25 to 0.65%...Only federal loans qualify, no private loans. Refinanced loans do not qualify either. Never refinance to a private lender if you're pursuing any sort of forgiveness plan.
Um, the reason those loans cannot be discharged is because they are federally backed. A private student loan can be discharged. 0 for 1Give private lenders the chance to lend with basically no way out of a loan other than death, and they will exploit the hell out of it,
We aren’t talking about high income professionals who can pay back student loans due to their high income. That debt is being paid off by the borrowers no matter how many physicians bank on some sort of forgiveness program. The default rate among healthcare professionals I believe is far less than 1%. The “student loan crisis” (what a dumb/hyperbolic term) consists of those undergraduate degrees where the cost to attend is many multiples of the expected yearly income. Social workers. Communications degree holders. Some teachers that attend $200k private schools with no scholarship for a BA/BS. Etc. If universities were forced to back loans, or if the loans were underwritten by any financial institution, a cost/benefit analysis would be done and you could not get a loan for a Gender Studies degree from Amherst. If you could, the interest rate would be so high that essentially only people who could afford to blow the money could do it. The market wouldn’t change much for a medical degree. But it would absolutely change the availability, frequency, and cost of the degrees that are the source of this “crisis.” 0 for 2I don't buy your argument that the market will set the price of degrees itself through private lenders. At the end of the day, working a $200-300k/yr job with $300k in student debt is still more financially beneficial than working a minimum wage job for the rest of your life.
Your example of health care is a perfect example of how the private sector increases the costs of everything. I'm sure I don't need to remind you that the U.S. has insane health care costs due to privatization compared with other countries with nationalized health care systems.
Lots o text and still no example of one instance in which privatizing a sector has decreased costs.Um, the reason those loans cannot be discharged is because they are federally backed. A private student loan can be discharged. 0 for 1
We aren’t talking about high income professionals who can pay back student loans due to their high income. That debt is being paid off by the borrowers no matter how many physicians bank on some sort of forgiveness program. The default rate among healthcare professionals I believe is far less than 1%. The “student loan crisis” (what a dumb/hyperbolic term) consists of those undergraduate degrees where the cost to attend is many multiples of the expected yearly income. Social workers. Communications workers. Some teachers that attend $200k private schools with no scholarship for a BA/BS. Etc. If universities were forced to back loans, or if the loans were underwritten by any financial institution, a cost/benefit analysis would be done and you could not get a loan for a Gender Studies degree from Amherst. If you could, the interest rate would be so high that essentially only people who could afford to blow the money could do it. The market wouldn’t change much for a medical degree. But it would absolutely change the availability, frequency, and cost of the degrees that are the source of this “crisis.” 0 for 2
There is nothing “free market” about healthcare. I thought you were actually in practice. We have a bastardized “private” system that is anything but private. It is a half government, half 3rd party payer system where the consumer is not actually forced to be a consumer. This is just like the difference between TVs and cell phones. The only aspect of healthcare that resembles a “free market” is direct primary care. And I’m sure I don’t have to remind you that it allows a physician to deliver virtually unlimited care (within their scope of practice) for $100 per month, including some lab work. They make more money, seeing less patients, and spend more time with patients. And because this is a direct expense to the patients, those physicians will tell you that they are generally respectful of their time (after hours as many will give the patients direct contact info) and more likely to follow recommendations. Even the hard stuff like diet and activity modifications. Over 50% of my day is Medicare and Medicaid patients. There is nothing “private” about our healthcare system and the cost increases are strongly correlated to administrative bloat (necessary to navigate complex healthcare bureaucracy implemented by state and federal orgs/programs) and the rise of 3rd party payments to providers. Calling our system “private” or anything resembling a free market demonstrates a total lack of understanding of healthcare in America. 0 for 3.
Lots o text and still no example of one instance in which privatizing a sector has decreased costs.
I ignored the electronics example because it's a poor comparison. You're using industry that has always been privatized as a reason to justify privatizing government services. You're comparing apples to oranges. A good comparison would be how poorly privatizing the prison system has turned out. It's generally a horrible idea to take something that is generally regarded as a public service and then hand it over to private corporations with profit incentive. The basic goal of private industry is to extract the most wealth from another party and provide the most minimal service to maximize profit. Tell me, why do we need to add bank profit onto student loans? Why does a profit need to be turned on offering education and opportunity to youth? Why can't we just offer 0% loans that can actually feasibly be paid in full? A $200k loan wouldn't be insurmountable if it didn't capitalize to $500k during the life of the loan.I guess you refuse to acknowledge the decrease in price of most consumer electronics that I already posted.
The article I quoted wasn't an example of "government interference"
not sure why people can’t be happy for those benefiting? Y’all just a bunch of miserable people.
If you had student loans you didn’t have to make a payment for 33ish months with 0 increase in debt/interest, and 10k forgiven. Plus the money you would have paid would have gone to quality of life and investments. Collectively you got a massive benefit.
Not every legislation has to help you or be about you.
Podiatry can’t get together to fix their board issues but y’all expect the country to come together to pass a “perfect” legislation.
Lastly, duh, Biden did something good for the people that voted for him. Like that’s the point. That’s how elections work. It doesn’t have to make sense financial or morally. The same way Trump gave a 750 billion tax break to top 5% of Americans. I bet the rich podiatrist here didn’t complain about that one.
This is the guy that walks into the doctors lounge and switches the TV to Fox News.Just to transfer money to adults who entered into a voluntary contract with a lending institution, knowing the terms of said contract at the time of execution? Not to mention none of this changes the fact that thousands of Americans will continue the poor financial decisions that got them into this position in the first place, when will the next round of forgiveness be?
Bringing the Trump tax cut into this is laughable. Individuals with AGI of $15-50k experienced the largest % tax break out of all filers.
Forget the news. I’ll be trying to find some ol’ 1970’s dubbed kung fu flick.This is the guy that walks into the doctors lounge and switches the TV to Fox News.
Wonder what those kung fu stuntmen's feet look like on xrayForget the news. I’ll be trying to find some ol’ 1970’s dubbed kung fu flick.
Why not do the same with medical education? Used to be like that in the old days.Higher education should be devalued. Teachers should spend 2 years getting an associates and then a year or two student teaching, then they get certified. Would help these supposed teacher shortages
Why not do the same with medical education? Used to be like that in the old days.
The problem with teacher education in this country is that it's already the least competitive/attractive profession. Making it even less so by lowering standards, isn't the solution. In some countries, the best and brightest go into education, and it shows in their outcomes.
Can we also conduct a longitudinal study on podiatrists' lung function after years of inhaling fungal spores?This happened with vascular surgery, instead of 5 + 2 years it was shortened to a direct 5 year integrated residency.
Anyway I think we need to shift our attention to more important issues like from APMA emails - what speed should we set our nail dremel to prevent deadly thermal necrosis… is foot lotion best applied in a circular motion or up and down?
Sure, I’m a fan of the 2+4 undergrad/medical school models. I’m all for more of those.Why not do the same with medical education? Used to be like that in the old days.
The problem with teacher education in this country is that it's already the least competitive/attractive profession. Making it even less so by lowering standards, isn't the solution. In some countries, the best and brightest go into education, and it shows in their outcomes.
This is the guy that walks into the doctors lounge and switches the TV to Fox News.
I am the one who switches it to HGTV...This is the guy that walks into the doctors lounge and switches the TV to Fox News.
I mean it was stupid, but not offensive, and I don’t know that it was worth reporting. There’s some sensi people on here. At least you don’t have to sit in the corner with CutsWithFury.Actually I turn on South Park at lunch in the lounge. Thankfully I don’t have any colleagues on our medical staff as sensitive as the individual who reported the meme above as offensive and having it removed. Because I would be pissed if I couldn’t watch South Park over lunch or in between cases.
I hope you didn’t use LapiplastyThis was a good read while waiting for a Lapidus: The Toll of Student Debt in the U.S.
"More than 45 million people collectively owe $1.6 trillion"
I mean it was stupid, but not offensive, and I don’t know that it was worth reporting. There’s some sensi people on here. At least you don’t have to sit in the corner with CutsWithFury.
They still let you post with that ankle monitor on?I actually bring value to these threads and have been for years. I’ve had numerous posters thank me in my DMs for my brutal honesty and willingness to answer their questions about searching for jobs and residency/fellowship training.
I am not going anywhere even if SDN moderators favor the ABPM and let Lee Rogers spam our boards.
They still let you post with that ankle monitor on?
I’m happy the loans are gone. But to get to that point was rough. The last location I worked at had great pay but caused issues with my wife. I feel like I’m finally settling down better location, kids will start a decent school and no more podiatry loans. I still have some private loans but they are nothing compared to the podiatry loans.Im one year out of residency so far and have 39 qualifying payments towards PSLF. Just need them to verify the other 7 payments. With the recent PSLF changes recently all those months that i didnt make payments still counted towards my PSLF payments which I’m very thankful for. Working for the govt may not make u the most money but getting money yearly towards your student loans AND being able to qualify for PSLF is amazing.
I’m having a bourbon… my entire federal loans of over 300k was just forgiven because of PSLF. 3 years of residency and 7 years in the country. I have no clue what do with myself now. 🥃
This statement shows ignorance on why tuition is high and how the gov has created the inflation.Give me one instance in which privatizing a sector has lowered prices.
Tuition limits need to be set, and then student loans need to be given interest-free. Access to higher education should not be a for-profit endeavor.
Lest say that your simple approach is correct and it is as simple as helping people out. Why don't we just help everyone making under 250K out by forgiving all student loans, all home loans, all car loans, all consumer debt. Why not just make every middle class debt free so they can go out and enjoy life/buy a house/not worry about money.not sure why people can’t be happy for those benefiting? Y’all just a bunch of miserable people.
If you had student loans you didn’t have to make a payment for 33ish months with 0 increase in debt/interest, and 10k forgiven. Plus the money you would have paid would have gone to quality of life and investments. Collectively you got a massive benefit.
Not every legislation has to help you or be about you.
Podiatry can’t get together to fix their board issues but y’all expect the country to come together to pass a “perfect” legislation.
Lastly, duh, Biden did something good for the people that voted for him. Like that’s the point. That’s how elections work. It doesn’t have to make sense financial or morally. The same way Trump gave a 750 billion tax break to top 5% of Americans. I bet the rich podiatrist here didn’t complain about that one.