The $555,000 Student-Loan Burden

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When Michelle Bisutti, a 41-year-old family practitioner in Columbus, Ohio, finished medical school in 2003, her student-loan debt amounted to roughly $250,000. Since then, it has ballooned to $555,000.

It is the result of her deferring loan payments while she completed her residency, default charges and relentlessly compounding interest rates. Among the charges: a single $53,870 fee for when her loan was turned over to a collection agency.

"Maybe half of it was my fault because I didn't look at the fine print," Dr. Bisutti says. "But this is just outrageous now."

To be sure, Dr. Bisutti's case is extreme, and lenders say student-loan terms are clear and that they try to work with borrowers who get in trouble.

But as tuitions rise, many people are borrowing heavily to pay their bills. Some no doubt view it as "good debt," because an education can lead to a higher salary. But in practice, student loans are one of the most toxic debts, requiring extreme consumer caution and, as Dr. Bisutti learned, responsibility.

Unlike other kinds of debt, student loans can be particularly hard to wriggle out of. Homeowners who can't make their mortgage payments can hand over the keys to their house to their lender. Credit-card and even gambling debts can be discharged in bankruptcy. But ditching a student loan is virtually impossible, especially once a collection agency gets involved. Although lenders may trim payments, getting fees or principals waived seldom happens.

Yet many former students are trying. There is an estimated $730 billion in outstanding federal and private student-loan debt, says Mark Kantrowitz of FinAid.org, a Web site that tracks financial-aid issues -- and only 40% of that debt is actively being repaid. The rest is in default, or in deferment, which means that payments and interest are halted, or in "forbearance," which means payments are halted while interest accrues.

Although Dr. Bisutti's debt load is unusual, her experience having problems repaying isn't. Emmanuel Tellez's mother is a laid-off factory worker, and $120 from her $300 unemployment checks is garnished to pay the federal PLUS student loan she took out for her son.

By the time Mr. Tellez graduated in 2008, he had $50,000 of his own debt in loans issued by SLM Corp., known as Sallie Mae, the largest private student lender. In December, he was laid off from his $29,000-a-year job in Boston and defaulted. Mr. Tellez says that when he signed up, the loan wasn't explained to him well, though he concedes he missed the fine print.

Loan terms, including interest rates, are disclosed "multiple times and in multiple ways," says Martha Holler, a spokeswoman for Sallie Mae, who says the company can't comment on individual accounts. Repayment tools and account information are accessible on Sallie Mae's Web site as well, she says.

Many borrowers say they are experiencing difficulties working out repayment and modification terms on their loans. Ms. Holler says that Sallie Mae works with borrowers individually to revamp loans. Although the U.S. Department of Education has expanded programs like income-based repayment, which effectively caps repayments for some borrowers, others might not qualify.

Heather Ehmke of Oakland, Calif., renegotiated the terms of her subprime mortgage after her home was foreclosed. But even after filing for bankruptcy, she says she couldn't get Sallie Mae, one of her lenders, to adjust the terms on her student loan. After 14 years with patches of deferment and forbearance, the loan has increased from $28,000 to more than $90,000. Her monthly payments jumped from $230 to $816. Last month, her petition for undue hardship on the loans was dismissed.

Sallie Mae supports reforms that would allow student loans to be dischargeable in bankruptcy for those who have made a good-faith effort to repay them, says Ms. Holler.

Dr. Bisutti says she loves her work, but regrets taking out so many student loans. She admits that she made mistakes in missing payments, deferring her loans and not being completely thorough with some of the paperwork, but was surprised at how quickly the debt spiraled.

She says she knew when she started medical school in 1999 that she would have to borrow heavily. But she reasoned that her future income as a doctor would make paying off the loans easy. While in school, her loans racked up interest with variable rates ranging from 3% to 11%.

She maxed out on federal loans, borrowing $152,000 over four years, and sought private loans from Sallie Mae to help make up the difference. She also took out two loans from Wells Fargo & Co. for $20,000 each. Each had a $2,000 origination fee. The total amount she borrowed at the time: $250,000.

In 2005, the bill for the Wells Fargo loans came due. Representatives from the bank called her father, Michael Bisutti, every day for two months demanding payment. Mr. Bisutti, who had co-signed on the loans, finally decided to cover the $550 monthly payments for a year.

Wells Fargo says it will stop calling consumers if they request it, says senior vice president Glen Herrick, who adds that the bank no longer imposes origination fees on its private loans.

Sallie Mae, meanwhile, called Mr. Bisutti's neighbor. The neighbor told Mr. Bisutti about the call. "Now they know [my dad's] daughter the doctor defaulted on her loans," Dr. Bisutti says.

Ms. Holler, the Sallie Mae spokeswoman, says that the company may contact a neighbor to verify an individual's address. But in those cases, she says, the details of the debt obligation aren't discussed.

Dr. Bisutti declined to authorize Sallie Mae to comment specifically on her case. "The overwhelming majority of medical-school graduates successfully repay their student loans," Ms. Holler says.

After completing her fellowship in 2007, Dr. Bisutti juggled other debts, including her credit-card balance, and was having trouble making her $1,000-a-month student-loan payments. That year, she defaulted on both her federal and private loans. That is when the "collection cost" fee of $53,870 was added on to her private loan.

Meanwhile, the variable interest rates continue to compound on her balance and fees. She recently applied for income-based repayment, but she still isn't sure if she will qualify. She makes $550-a-month payments to Wells Fargo for the two loans she hasn't defaulted on. By the time she is done, she will have paid the bank $128,000 -- over three times the $36,000 she received.

She recently entered a rehabilitation agreement on her defaulted federal loans, which now carry an additional $31,942 collection cost. She makes monthly payments on those loans -- now $209,399 -- for $990 a month, with only $100 of it going toward her original balance. The entire balance of her federal loans will be paid off in 351 months. Dr. Bisutti will be 70 years old.

The debt load keeps her up at night. Her damaged credit has prevented her from buying a home or a new car. She says she and her boyfriend of three years have put off marriage and having children because of the debt.

Dr. Bisutti told her 17-year-old niece the story of her debt as a cautionary tale "so the next generation of kids who want to get a higher education knows what they're getting into," she says. "I will likely have to deal with this debt for the rest of my life."


Source: Yahoo Finance
the-555000-student-loan-burden: Personal Finance News from Yahoo! Finance
 
$555K!!! I just owe college loan company $52K because my VR did not support me. I took out loans to pay for my education. Oh, well. :aw:
 
Unbelievable how long it'll take that doctor to pay off her debts.

I only owes about $11k on my student loan.

Once I get a full time job that pays over $40 thousands or something then a percentage of my wage will be garnished toward student loan.

If you don't earn that much then you don't pay unless you want to make voluntary payment.
 
If you die in the USA with the student loan - NO WORRIES. The government will absorb the remainder of the loan.
 
Unbelievable how long it'll take that doctor to pay off her debts.

I only owes about $11k on my student loan.

Once I get a full time job that pays over $40 thousands or something then a percentage of my wage will be garnished toward student loan.

If you don't earn that much then you don't pay unless you want to make voluntary payment.
Yeah, if you earn less than $40,000, you wait until you get a better salary then you pay off the loan. Mine will start this year :/
 
Unbelievable how long it'll take that doctor to pay off her debts.

I only owes about $11k on my student loan.

Once I get a full time job that pays over $40 thousands or something then a percentage of my wage will be garnished toward student loan.

If you don't earn that much then you don't pay unless you want to make voluntary payment.

not surprised. handful of my doctor friends cannot pay off their loans after all these undergrad, grad school, and med school. It takes several years. They do have bills to pay like apartment, car, etc... and even wedding. Most of them get married after finishing med school and securing a job.

Beside - those school loans with low interest rate are cheap anyway... not a problem. It's stupid to pay them all off at once too soon because it's going to take you a while to go back up again unless you're filthy rich or you have a rich family member to pay it off for you.
 
I wanted to go to dental school but I realize I don't want to be $200K in debt for something I'm not 100% sure I'm going to like.

Btw school/student loan doesn't automatically make it "good debt." It can still be bad if you have too much money loaned for school and your job doesn't pay you enough. If you default you can't get rid of a school loan using bankruptcy. This doctor has more than $500K debt that she couldn't put anything down for 6-8 years of med school and training. I bet you she's not making anywhere near that per year now. Most doctors are not rich because they have malpractice insurance and now they have insurance companies that dictate how much per patient they can make. Of course part of this is her fault, but still.
 
I wanted to go to dental school but I realize I don't want to be $200K in debt for something I'm not 100% sure I'm going to like.

Btw school/student loan doesn't automatically make it "good debt." It can still be bad if you have too much money loaned for school and your job doesn't pay you enough. If you default you can't get rid of a school loan using bankruptcy. This doctor has more than $500K debt that she couldn't put anything down for 6-8 years of med school and training. I bet you she's not making anywhere near that per year now. Most doctors are not rich because they have malpractice insurance and now they have insurance companies that dictate how much per patient they can make. Of course part of this is her fault, but still.
it is most likely that she mismanaged her money and did a poor job in securing a loan. Like I said - I have a handful of friends who are doctors and dentists. They're fine.

Every doctors have debt. point is - they're able to make monthly payments.
 
it is most likely that she mismanaged her money and did a poor job in securing a loan. Like I said - I have a handful of friends who are doctors and dentists. They're fine.

Of course, I agree this lady mismanaged her loan.

However, I think the fact that people see school loan as "good debt" they are not careful with it. So they go to school for jobs that don't pay well enough. It's fine if you want a job that doesn't pay well enough... but not if you get a huge loan to cover it because school loans are apparently "good." It's very limiting. I should know. I made the same mistake!
 
Of course, I agree this lady mismanaged her loan.

However, I think the fact that people see school loan as "good debt" they are not careful with it. So they go to school for jobs that don't pay well enough. It's fine if you want a job that doesn't pay well enough... but not if you get a huge loan to cover it because school loans are apparently "good." It's very limiting. I should know. I made the same mistake!

yea it's an investment. going to college is optional. owning the stocks is optional. owning a house is optional. all of those requires loan for most people. all of those have long-term potential for you to either get rich or poor. it's certainly a risk but those who fare better are usually the one who know what loans to get and how to manage the debt.
 
I recall seeing a news story about this graduate who was shocked to find out how high he debt was. She is a social worker and has no way of paying off the debt any time soon. Something about being very careful to read the fine print of some types of student loans, not sure. Anyone know?
 
I recall seeing a news story about this graduate who was shocked to find out how high he debt was. She is a social worker and has no way of paying off the debt any time soon. Something about being very careful to read the fine print of some types of student loans, not sure. Anyone know?

yep most likely. She probably took the loan out as loan.... not as student loan. Some people added it to their mortgage.
 
get lot of loan and go college, you pay debt then you're rich.

never get loan and work after high school, you have a long way

either are sucks
 
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