You Don’t Need a Billionaire Bailout to Pay Your Student Loans. You Need a Plan.

Student Loan Consolidation

Last week, we saw the incredible story of Robert F. Smith, a billionaire technology investor who owns Vista Equity Partners. After being asked to make the commencement speech at Morehouse College in Atlanta, he gave them the best graduation gift anyone could ask for. He agreed to pay the entire class’s student loans.

“God has smiled on me,” said one Morehouse Student. He had over $100,000 in student loans just vanish into thin air. The student most likely would’ve spent the next 10-20 years paying that debt off if it wasn’t for Smith’s generous gift. But billionaires aren’t the only one stepping in to help.

Yesterday, we wrote a story about Burger King offering to help by creating their own giveaway program using the BK App. Not to mention, truTV’s game show “Paid Off”, hosted by Michael Torpey, has made its return for another season. “Paid Off” allows people with student debt to compete against other grads with trivia. The winner gets enough money to pay off their debt.

We can easily consider how generous and special it is to be able to pay off someone’s debt. Yet, while it’s special when billionaires or TV shows or companies do it, many just expect it. There’s a whole movement sparking where students demand we raise the taxes on billionaires just to make college free for everyone. While it’s a nice dream, it probably won’t happen.

Generosity and Student Loans

While any comprehensive student loan bill will probably never be enacted into law, we have to think of ways to help graduates who are drowning. When you leave school, you don’t have a job. You’re a low man or woman on the totem pole. Yet, your first student loan bill is due within a few months, whether you’re ready for it or not.

Having a lot of student debt is burdensome. It prevents students from making major life decisions once they graduate. In many ways, they become a slave to it for the next 10-20 years. One way companies are starting to help is by offering generous repayment options. Rather than a 401(k) for retirement, companies offer benefits where they’ll match contributions dollar-for-dollar.

One company that does is Carhartt. They’re based in Dearborn, Michigan and work to help their employees pay their student loans. Gifts from billionaires and company CEOs are a major investment in their lives and helps them out more than anything else. Even a small gift will bring down the principal payment and cut the amount of interest paid over time.

“Instead of devoting thousands of dollars a month to student loan payments or being in an income-driven repayment plan for decades, they will now be able to invest in themselves,” said Mark Kantrowitz, publisher and vice president of research for Savingforcollege.com

“My first thought when I heard the news is what an amazing graduation gift!” said Lynita Taylor, diversity and inclusion program manager at the Mike Ilitch School of Business at Wayne State University. “College can certainly be seen as a worthy investment, but the staggering amount of debt you can accrue while pursuing that investment is heartbreaking.”

We Need More than Gifts

If gifts are the only way to end this problem, we aren’t going to see the end of the crisis anytime soon. The total amount of student loan debt out there currently sits at $1.53 trillion. That’s even before this most recent year has been tabulated yet. Those numbers are set to be released this fall. It’s going to be nearly impossible to raise a trillion dollars by gift alone.

It may help several individuals, but is Smith going to do the same next year if he’s invited back? And the year after? You can’t count on a gift or the government stepping in to help. They may provide some assistance, but they won’t just forgive over a trillion dollars’ worth of debt. You took out the loan, so you have to take responsibility for that.

If you’re a recent graduate, there are three ways you can make the situation easier on yourself.

1) Don’t wait out the grace period. You have about six months until you’re expected to start making your first payment. But during that six months, interest will accumulate. If you start paying off a $25,000 loan right away, you’ll save yourself $795.

2) Get a handle on what you owe. It can be frustrating once you leave college and see that bill for the first time. Don’t wait. Take the bull by the horns. Create an account on the Federal Student Aid website at studentloans.gov. Once you do that, be proactive. Track your payments. See how long it will take to pay it off.

3) Don’t make minimum payments. Kevin O’Leary of Shark Tank says the best thing to do is to devote nearly every dollar you have into your loans. When you graduate isn’t the right time to start buying fancy stuff, getting a car loan, or wasting money. Live frugally. Move back home for a year. Put all that extra money towards your loan to pay it off much quicker and get it out of your life.

Read More

Billionaire Commencement Speaker Tells Audience He’ll Pay their Student Loans

Life Style

Not too many of us remember our commencement speaker, unless they were someone famous. In the back of our minds, we were thinking about getting the heck out of there. Summer was coming and it was time to be done! If you are part of the Morehouse College Class of 2019, you won’t be forgetting your commencement speaker anytime soon.

Robert F. Smith is a technology investor and a billionaire. He is the CEO of Vista Equity Partners and was asked to speak at Morehouse College to send off the graduates. Little did the students know, this billionaire CEO was going to announce to the world he was going to pay off all the student loans. What an incredible moment it was!

You could see in the crowd plenty of shocked faces as the audience stood and gave Smith a standing ovation. The amount of student loans for the class of 400 totals somewhere near $40 million. Smith also pledged a $1.5 million gift to the school as well. So, it’s easy to see how this man is clearly giving back to the next generation. In fact, he tells them to do the same.

“On behalf of the eight generations of my family that have been in this country, we’re gonna put a little fuel in your bus. This is my class, 2019. And my family is making a grant to eliminate their student loans,” Smith said to nearly 400 graduating students who cheered when they heard the news. “I know my class will make sure they pay this forward…and let’s make sure every class has the same opportunity going forward because we are enough to take care of our own community.”

Student Loans and Politics

Student loans has been a highly politicized topic in recent months. Most of the Democratic candidates at the beginning of their campaign has promised to champion the student loan debt problem. Currently, 44 million Americans owe $1.53 trillion. That’s not a number that appears to be going down anytime soon.

Yet, it’s moments like what went down at Morehouse College that has people paying attention. Morehouse is an all-male school that is historically all black. It’s located in Atlanta, Georgia. Smith says a person’s education shouldn’t be left up to where they live or the color of their skin. We should all be helping in our own way.

“Where you live shouldn’t determine whether you get educated. Where you go to school shouldn’t determine whether you get textbooks,” Smith said. “The opportunity you access should be determined by the fierceness of your intellect, the courage in your creativity and the grit that allows you to overcome expectations that weren’t set high enough.”

Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, one of the voices along with Bernie Sanders calling for free college for everyone, made her voice known on this topic. She tweeted:

“Every Morehouse Class of 2019 student is getting their student debt load paid off by their commencement speaker. This could be the start of what’s known in Econ as a ‘natural experiment.’ Follow these students & compare their life choices w their peers over the next 10-15 years.”

She added in another tweet, “It’s important to note that people shouldn’t be in a situation where they depend on a stranger’s enormous act of charity for this kind of liberation to begin with (aka college should be affordable), but it is an incredible act of community investment in this system as it is.”

Read More