More Than 40% of Student Borrowers Aren’t Making Payments
More than 40% of Americans who borrowed from the government’s
main student-loan program aren’t making payments or are behind on more
than $200 billion owed, raising worries that millions of them may never
repay.
The new figures represent the fallout of a decadelong borrowing boom
as record numbers of students enrolled in trade schools, universities
and graduate schools.
While most have since left school and joined the workforce, 43% of
the roughly 22 million Americans with federal student loans weren’t
making payments as of Jan. 1, according to a quarterly snapshot of the
Education Department’s $1.2 trillion student-loan portfolio.
About 1 in 6 borrowers, or 3.6 million, were in default on $56
billion in student debt, meaning they had gone at least a year without
making a payment. Three million more owing roughly $66 billion were at
least a month behind.
Meantime, another three million owing almost $110 billion
were in “forbearance” or “deferment,” meaning they had received
permission to temporarily halt payments due to a financial emergency,
such as unemployment. The figures exclude borrowers still in school and
those with government-guaranteed private loans.
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