• MSN
  • Hotmail
  • More
    • Autos
    • My MSN
    • Video
    • Careers & Jobs
    • Personals
    • Weather
    • Delish
    • Quotes
    • White Pages
    • Games
    • Real Estate
    • Wonderwall
    • Horoscopes
    • Shopping
    • Yellow Pages
    • Local Edition
    • Traffic
    • Feedback
    • Maps & Directions
    • Travel
    • Full MSN Index
  • Bing
  • NBCNews.com
  • TODAY
  • Nightly News
  • Rock Center
  • Meet the Press
  • Dateline
  • msnbc
  • Breaking News
  • Newsvine
  • News
  • Entertainment
  • Food
  • Health
  • Money
  • Pets
  • Moms
  • Style
  • Travel
  • Books
  • KLG & Hoda
  • Video
  • More
    • Comics & Games
    • Concert Series
    • Good News!
    • Hip2Save
    • Horoscope
    • Lotto
    • Photo Features
    • Relationships
    • Rossen Reports
    • Tech
    • Weather
  • Recommended: Cheapism: Best budget umbrella strollers
  • Recommended: How to tie the knot on a shoestring
  • Recommended: Here's how much Americans think families need to get by
  • Recommended: Buzz: Snooping bosses don't surprise many


Life Inc. is about how the economy is affecting you: your life, your job, your family, your finances, your spending. Check us out on Facebook or follow us on Twitter.

  • ↓ About this blog
  • ↓ Archives
    • Icons Email E-mail updates
    • Icons Twitter Follow on Twitter
    • Icons Feed Subscribe to RSS
  • Advertise | AdChoices
    19
    Mar
    2013
    11:49am, EDT

    Universities suing graduates over unpaid student loans

    Americans owe roughly $1 trillion on student loans, and as college graduates encounter difficulties with high monthly payments, the universities they attended are suing to get the borrowed money back. CNBC's Scott Cohn reports.

    By Eun Kyung Kim, TODAY contributor

    Americans owe roughly $1 trillion in student loans. Part of the unpaid debt is on federal Perkins loans offered to students on the basis of need. Now several leading universities are suing their former students to get some of that money back.

    Yale, the University of Pennsylvania, and George Washington University all have sued graduates over failure to pay, according to court records. Penn filed two dozen cases last year alone, a 35 percent jump over the previous year.

    College of the Ozarks, a private, four-year Missouri college, is so concerned about the mounting debt of college graduates in the United States that it no longer will accept students who take out loans, Reuters reports.

    None of the schools would comment to TODAY, but George Washington University said it turns to litigation as a last resort.

    That’s not any comfort to Aaron Graff, who graduated from the school in 2010. Last year, George Washington sued him for failing to repay a $4,000 federal Perkins loan for low-income students.

    Graff said he already works two jobs to make payments of $600 a month on $60,000 worth of other student loans.

    "I maybe have about 100 dollars spending money a week – and spending money means gas, means food. I don’t go out to eat,” he said. "I guess I could get another job where I'm working 17, 18 hours a day."

    Unlike most forms of debt, student loans cannot be forgiven, even by declaring bankruptcy, and that has contributed to a rising delinquency program. For the first time, overdue student loans have surpassed late credit card payments, prompting many schools to turn to the court system to reclaim their money.

    However, Justin Draeger, president of the National Association of Student Financial Aid Administrators, said, “By and large, I think that most institutions are trying to work with their students.”

    Graff said he hopes the problem opens a dialogue among educators and lenders.

    “Let’s start to talk about why is college so expensive,” he said. “What is it that we're getting for our money when we put our money into these institutions?”

    This story was first reported on Bloomberg.com.

    More:

    Grandparents stepping up to help funds grandkids' education

    As college costs rise, parents raid retirement savings

     

    410 comments

    College loans, another scam from the debt industrial complex.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: college, savings, personal-finance, college-savings
  • 18
    Mar
    2013
    8:56am, EDT

    Grandparents stepping up to help fund grandkids' education

    By Michelle V. Rafter, TODAY contributor

    Go to a workshop on how to pay for your kids’ college education, and you’ll see more gray hair in the audience than in years past.

    It’s not because parents of college-bound students are older — it’s because more grandparents are there, taking notes.

    By all accounts, Grandma and Grandpa are more active than ever in funding their grandkids’ educations, including sinking money into 529 college savings plans.

    A 529 plan is designed to help families set aside money now to pay for future college costs. Such savings plans are named after Section 529 of the Internal Revenue Code, which created these types of plans in 1996. Typically, 529 plans are operated by a state or educational institution, and most states have at least one 529 plan.

    Michael Parker, executive director of the state agency that administers Oregon’s 529 plan, said attending workshops is one way grandparents show what a big deal it is to them that their grandkids get a degree.

    “They’re very interested in making sure that their kids, the parents, know this is hugely important, that the grandkids be financially prepared to get a college education,” he said.

    By the end of 2012, American families had a record $190.7 billion socked away in 529 college savings plans, according to a March 13 report from the College Savings Plans Network. More than 11 million of the accounts have been started since they were first offered 17 years ago.

    Parents still contribute the lion’s share of funds invested in 529 accounts. But contributions from grandparents now make up about 9.5 percent of the total, according to the most recent data from the Financial Research Corp, which tracks 529 investments. It was a substantial enough increase that FRC started keeping track of which types of relatives were funding 529s for the first time last year.

    Source: Financial Research Corp., a Division of Strategic Insight

    The trend isn’t lost on financial services companies, and many are starting to market 529 investment opportunities directly to grandparents as a result.

    In February, AARP and financial services provider TIAA-CREF launched just such a campaign. It includes a section on the AARP website that members can use to look up college savings plans in all 50 states and get help with investment options and tax questions.

    “Our goal is to elevate awareness in how 529 plans can help people save for college, and encourage more people, including grandparents, to save,” said Chad Peterson, a TIAA-CREF spokesman.

    Franklin Templeton Investments, which administers New Jersey’s 10-year-old 529 plan, also is marketing to grandparents directly, through seminars and information on its website.

    In some cases, grandparents are stepping in to help foot the bill because their adult children haven’t saved, got hit by the recession and have yet to recover, or are too tapped out paying current bills and saving for their own retirement to stash much away for college expenses.

    "In this economy, it’s much harder to save for college, so if grandparents give that nudge, or give some money, it’s helping their children do it," said Reyna Gobel, a college finance expert and author of the audiobook "How Smart Students Pay for School."

    Depending on their own circumstances, grandparents might find it more beneficial either to set up 529 accounts for their grandkids or contribute to existing accounts created by parents of college-bound students. When grandparents create accounts, they maintain control over where funds are invested, and can take money out at any time without penalty, according to Parker, the Oregon 529 plan director.

    Once funds are transferred to pay for tuition or books, the money is recognized as student income, which could affect how much financial aid the student receives the following year, he said.

    Money that grandparents deposit into a 529 account set up by a student’s parents shows up as the parents’ assets on the student’s financial aid applications, which could adversely affect how much they receive in scholarships or grants.

    Either way, tax law changes that took effect this year allow grandparents to put a maximum of $14,000 a year per grandchild into a 529 account. They can also make a one-time gift of five years’ worth of contributions per person. That means a married couple could conceivably give a lump sum of $140,000 to each grandchild once every five years.

    Not all grandparents make such major contributions. At Franklin Templeton Investments, people can open 529 accounts with as little as $25. The firm encourages parents and grandparents to contribute on a regular basis. As a present for a birthday or holiday, it’s a gift that “makes more of an impact,” said Roger Michaud, senior vice president for Franklin Templeton Investments' North America advisory services division and current chair of the College Savings Foundation.

    There’s some evidence that grandparents may be aiding their offspring’s offspring at their own expense. Sixty-two percent of grandparents report providing money or other financial support to grandkids within the past five years, according to a September 2012 MetLife survey of 1,008 U.S. grandparents ages 45 and older. Of that number, a third said they gave financial support even though it had a negative effect on their own financial security, according to the report.

    It’s harder to determine to what extent grandparents are working longer to provide that financial assistance, said Kathleen Christensen, program director at the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, which provides grants for research on aging and work. “We do know it’s happening, and I think it’s an important trend to recognize,” she said.

    Americans owe roughly $1 trillion on student loans, and as college graduates encounter difficulties with high monthly payments, the universities they attended are suing to get the borrowed money back. CNBC's Scott Cohn reports.

    34 comments

    It is one of the consequences of abortion and birth control on demand. Family sizes are getting smaller. With this, you have what the Chinese call the 4 2 1 syndrome. Four grand parents and two parents all spoiling one child.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: featured, personal-finance, college-savings, 529-plan
  • 24
    Aug
    2010
    2:00pm, EDT

    Maybe Bank Mom n' Dad needs a bailout too

    For the third year in a row, a national measure of U.S. parents’ readiness to pay for higher education has decreased, according to a survey released Tuesday by Fidelity Investments.

    Fidelity’s “College Savings Indicator” surveyed over 2,500 families with children 18 and under and found that an American family with income of at least $30,000 a year is on track to cover 16 percent of total college costs, including tuition, room and board, and fees. That’s down from 18 percent in 2009, 21 percent in 2008 and 24 percent in 2007.

    The survey was conducted between June 10 and June 29 of this year by an independent research firm.

    Fidelity blamed several factors for the drop: rising college costs; a lower savings rate; and increased unemployment. Thirty percent of the families surveyed experienced a job loss.

    That has forced some parents to dip into their children’s college savings accounts to pay basic living expenses, including unexpected medical costs.

    Is there any good news?

    Although families are saving less, 67 percent of those surveyed said they have started saving for college, up from 63 percent in 2009, 60 percent in 2008 and 58 percent in 2007.

    And for all you young people, don’t fret too much: the survey shows that most parents still believe it is their duty to pay for your college costs.

    Click here to read more from the survey.

    2 comments

    Yeah. Wish I had parents who believed it was their duty pay for my college education.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: business, finance, featured, college-savings

Browse

  • featured,
  • economy,
  • employment,
  • personal-finance,
  • careers,
  • retail,
  • business,
  • buzz,
  • taxes,
  • cheapism,
  • workplace,
  • consumerman,
  • deals,
  • consumer-news,
  • good-graph-friday,
  • jobs,
  • unemployment,
  • retirement,
  • live-chat,
  • money,
  • career,
  • education,
  • food,
  • real-estate,
  • recession,
  • autos,
  • holiday-retail,
  • women,
  • college,
  • shopping,
  • money-911,
  • facebook,
  • housing,
  • wealth,
  • irs,
  • gas-prices,
  • work,
  • commentid-featured,
  • savings
Also

Top More on TODAY.com headlines

3155,10
Advertise | AdChoices

Archives

  • 2013
    • May (39)
    • April (66)
    • March (75)
    • February (72)
    • January (74)
  • 2012
    • December (57)
    • November (94)
    • October (75)
    • September (69)
    • August (51)
    • July (58)
    • June (76)
    • May (63)
    • April (62)
    • March (77)
    • February (69)
    • January (48)
  • 2011
    • December (62)
    • November (69)
    • October (63)
    • September (62)
    • August (58)
    • July (54)
    • June (42)
    • May (48)
    • April (43)
    • March (47)
    • February (36)
    • January (43)
  • 2010
    • December (65)
    • November (64)
    • October (51)
    • September (43)
    • August (16)

Most Commented

  • Here's how much Americans think families need to get by (238)
  • Big Brother may not be watching, but your employer probably is (187)
  • Great Recession will haunt millions into their retirement years, study finds (163)
  • Retirement age in US rises to 61 (from 57 in the early 90s) (192)
  • So your kid wants a credit card. What do you do now? (45)
  • Bus drivers top obese workers list; doctors tip lighter (48)
  • Budget brides save by buying canceled weddings (19)

Other blogs

  • Hip2Save

More on TODAY.com

3155,8
© 2013 NBCNews.com
  • Today.com Money
  • About us
  • Contact
  • Help
  • Site map
  • Careers
  • Closed captioning
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy policy
  • Advertise