student debt

BONUS call: Student Loan Debt

Help! I'm drowning in debt thanks to high interest student loans. My mom has the money to help. Is it worth having a conversation? That's the dilemma facing Megan from North Carolina on the latest BONUS call.

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BONUS call: Student Loan Debt

Should you use your emergency reserve to tackle your student loan debt? That's what Kristin from Florida was wondering on the latest BONUS call.

“Better Off” is sponsored by Betterment.

Have a money question? Email us here.

We love feedback so please subscribe and leave us a rating or review in Apple Podcasts!

Connect with me at these places for all my content:

https://twitter.com/jillonmoney

https://www.facebook.com/JillonMoney

https://www.instagram.com/jillonmoney/

https://www.linkedin.com/in/jillonmoney/ 

http://www.stitcher.com/podcast/jill-... 

https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/b...

"Better Off" theme music is by Joel Goodman, www.joelgoodman.com.

How to Pay for College

How to Pay for College

As the college acceptance letters arrive, students are thrilled. However, while parents and grandparents are proud, they may also feel a little anxious about footing the bill for what they know is an important credential in today’s labor force. Before you sign on a dotted line, or heaven-forbid, raid your retirement account or borrow against your house, it’s time for a financial reality check. Here are the basic sources available to fund higher education, according to the Common Application, a not-for-profit member organization of more than 700 colleges and universities in the United States and around the world.

Should you go into Student Debt to Pay for College?

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With the cost of tuition, fees, room and board at public four-year colleges running around $20,000 -- and up to $70,000 for some elite private schools, how can families foot the steep education bill without getting crushed by student debt? Now that college acceptances are in, it's time to figure out how to pay for that coveted degree. Before you agree to the financial award offered, know that if your family finances have changed since you completed your FAFSA forms, due to a job loss, high medical expenses or caring for an elderly parent, you can appeal to get a better package. You will need to gather supporting documentation and be a bit of a squeaky wheel, but it is well worth the time and energy.

If the prospective student has received a better package from an equally ranked school, it is worth inquiring as to whether a match is available. In this case, financial aid officials say that it is better for the student to make the appeal directly, rather than have the parents call.

You should also know that the financial offers are only good for the first year of borrowing--families have to apply annually for aid. That means that your award could drop in the subsequent three years, which is why you should ask the college how much its costs could change. You can research whether a reduction is likely by using the Education Department’s College Navigator,  which highlights what percentage of first-year students at each school, earns scholarships compared with the entire undergraduate student body.

The biggest problem that families have is that there is no uniform standard for how colleges detail true net cost of earning a degree. That puts the onus on families to parse through the likely four-year total cost of attendance (tuition, fees, room, board, books, travel), the amount of financial aid available and the money that will be accessed through loans and work-study.

Once you have nailed down the costs, then it’s time to decide whether or not you will borrow money to finance the degree. Students should explore federal loan options before private ones, because most private loans have variable interest rates that can rise substantially in the future and only federal loans are eligible for different kinds of loan repayment options.

Colleges also often include federal parent PLUS loans in the aid package, but those come with a hefty loan origination fee of nearly 4.3 percent. Parents should check out the private sector too and remember that parental borrowers have to start making monthly payments immediately. Finally, education experts suggest that students only borrow a total of what they can earn in their first full year of employment and parents should be careful not to blow up their own retirement plans to finance education.

Because so many parents are trying to juggle competing financial goals, many grandparents have gotten into the act. While a grandparent’s assets are not included when colleges determine eligibility for financial aid, if a 529 plan is established in the grandparent’s name for the benefit of the grandchild, it can negatively impact the student’s financial aid award.

The reason is that when money is withdrawn to make a payment on behalf of the beneficiary of the plan, students must disclose those amounts as income, which can reduce a student’s aid eligibility significantly. In order not to diminish the ability to receive aid, grandparents should consider gifting the money to the parents, who can then deposit the gift into their own 529 accounts. Experts note that it makes sense to wait until after the aid has been determined before making the gift.

Financial Advice for the Class of 2015

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Amid college graduation season, I am often asked to provide financial advice for college students, who are heading out into the “Real World”. I’m hoping that six years after the worst recession since the Great Depression, the class of 2015 will be more financially prudent than some of its predecessors. That said, recent grads, as well as their elders who are trying to get their financial lives back on track, should work hard to complete “The Big 3”. (1) Pay down debt. Your first priority is to pay off the highest interest consumer-related loans (credit card and autos) and then work your way down to the lower interest ones. If you are among the nearly 70 percent of 2015 graduates with student loans, pay the minimal amount while you are whittling down your consumer debt. If the only debt you have is a student loan, then feel free to make extra payments to accelerate your pay-off time – the average student borrower takes about 20 years to repay the loans and the sooner you repay, the quicker that degree will pay you great dividends!

(2) Establish an emergency reserve fund of 6-12 months’ worth of expenses. This is also the account where you may want to accumulate money for a car or house down payment or any near-term financial goal -- meaning funds that you plan to access within the next year.

(3) Maximize retirement contributions. This is a tough one-very few recent graduates will earn enough money to put away the maximum of $18,000 this year, but many could contribute at least up to the company’s match level; or if they don’t have an employer plan, they could try to fund a Roth IRA up to the $5,500 maximum.

Job Insecurity: On the career front, it is clear that the labor market has shifted and workers now work for many companies, especially in the early years after college. Remember that your first job will not be the last one and the rotten job you hate today may be useful in helping you to figure out where you want to go tomorrow. Definitely cultivate a network, but do so carefully—nobody likes a nudge, who only makes contact when seeking a favor. Finally, be willing to take chances or move laterally so that you can position yourself for the next phase of your career.

MARKETS:

  • DJIA: 18,232, down 0.2% on week, up 2.3% YTD
  • S&P 500: 2126, up 0.2% on week, up 3.3% YTD
  • NASDAQ: 5,089 up 0.8% on week, up 7.5% YTD
  • Russell 2000: 1244, up 0.6% on week, up 3.9% YTD
  • 10-Year Treasury yield: 2.21% (from 2.14% a week ago)
  • July Crude: $59.72, down 1.4% on week
  • June Gold: $1204, down 1.7% on week
  • AAA Nat'l avg. for gallon of reg. gas: $2.74 (from $2.70 wk ago, $3.66 a year ago)

THE WEEK AHEAD:.

Mon 5/25: Markets closed for Memorial Day

Tues 5/26:

8:30 Durable Goods Orders

9:00 Case Shiller Home Price Index

10:00 New Home Sales

10:00 Consumer Confidence

Weds 5/27:

G-7 finance ministers and central bankers meet (through Fri) - Greece will be the focus

Thurs 5/28:

10:00 Pending Home Sales

Fri 5/29: 529 College Savings Plan Day

8:30 Q1 GDP (2nd estimate could show a contraction from prelim reading of +0.2%

9:45 Chicago PMI

10:00 Consumer Sentiment