GRADUATING
WITH A DIPLOMA
AND DEBT
Now is the time of year that many college
students are graduating with a degree, ambition, idealismand a load of
debt. Reducing that debt as quickly as possible is critical to helping
young adults start their career off on the right financial foot, say
CERTIFIED FINANCIAL PLANNER professionals.
More than 60 percent of students graduate with
student loans to pay back, according to a report by the State Public
Interest Research Groups, which evaluated U.S. Department of Education
data. Exactly how much debt depends on which study you read, but its
substantial. The American Council on Education reports that the average
student graduates with about $12,000 in student loan debt. The State
Publics Interest Research Group says the average student loan debt ran
nearly $17,000 in 2000, and it described 40 percent of those graduate
borrowers as having unmanageable levels of debtdefined as more
than 8 percent of the borrowers monthly income.
These amounts dont include private college
loans or credit card debt. A study by college lender Nellie Mae, for
example, says the typical student graduates with four credit cards and
$4,778 in debt, and one in five with debts higher than $6,000.
For todays graduates, debts like this
couldnt come at a worse time as they face a softer job market, few of
the generous signup bonuses offered in earlier years, and lower paying
entry-level positions.
While this debt may make it challenging for new
graduates to pay their rent, car payments and other basic living expenses,
its real impact is on the future, say planners. Take saving for your own
retirement, for example. Young workers have a financial advantage
theyll gradually lose the longer they are in the workplacetime. Time
is the Archimedes lever of investing. A dollar invested early in life can
grow, through the power of compounding, far larger than the same dollar
invested later in life.
Say you join a 401(k) plan at work at age 23
and invest $100 a month for the next 30 years. If the account earns eight
percent a year, youll earn $90,734.80 more over those 30 years than if
you wait until age 33 to start saving the same $100 a month. But if
youre burdened with loans, scraping together that $100 may prove
difficult.
The same goes for saving for other personal goals,
such as graduate school, marriage or buying your first home. Its not
uncommon for debt-laden students to have to turn down lesser-paying but
desirable jobsperhaps a stint in the Peace Corps, for examplebecause
they cant afford it.
So what can you do if youre faced with substantial
debt? First and foremost, say planners, pay it down as quickly as
possible. The longer debt drags out, the more it costs you in interest and
the longer it delays your pursuit of other life goals and dreams. For
example, if you pay only the minimum monthly payment on a $3,000 credit
card bill with 18 percent interest, it will take you over 29 years to pay
it off, at a total cost of over $10,000.
Unless youre earning exceptional money right out
of school, the only real way to pay more than the minimum is to live below
your means. New graduatestired of being the poor college
studenttypically want to buy a new car, new clothes or go on a dream
vacation. This not only doesnt help pay off old college debts, it piles
on new debt.
Consider consolidating your student loans. There are
pros and cons to this, and rules you should be aware of, so talk to a
financial advisor whos familiar with this before committing. Generally,
you can consolidate multiple, variable interest-rate loans into a single
loan and lock in the interest rate. Interest rates are at historic lows,
so now may be a good time. Also, the government is considering doing away
with the ability to lock in these low rates.
You also can stretch out the number of years to repay
the consolidated loanup to 30 years in some casesbut as in the case
of credit cards, youre going to end up paying more in the long run.
Keep the repayment period as short as you can manage.
June 2002 This column is
produced by the Financial Planning Association, the membership
organization for the financial planning community, and is provided by
McGuire & Co., LLP, a local member in good standing of the FPA.
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