Finding the Best Student Loans

With increases in college tuition showing no signs of slowing down, despite the recession, students are being required to borrow more and more money to fund their education.  Since a report from the US Census values a bachelor’s degree at about $900,000 in additional salary earned when compared to a high school diploma, and a master’s degree at $400,000 beyond a bachelor’s degree, most students are making a wise decision to borrow money now for college, since the costs of the debt are greatly outweighed by the financial benefits of a college degree.

However, given the limits on public student loan amounts put into place by the federal government, it is becoming more difficult to pay for college with public loans and personal savings.  The maximum amount that can be borrowed from the government is $31,000 for dependent undergraduate students, $57,000 for independent undergraduate students, and $138,500 for graduate students (and any undergraduate loans count against this total).  Given that tuition at many private schools has exceeded $50,000 per year and many professional graduate programs can cost over $100,000, federal student loans are inadequate.  This means that the student is responsible to fill in the gap, and the best option for students that don’t have thousands of dollars in cash available is private student loans.

Shopping for private student loans can be a difficult process because there are many more options available, but those options also provide the opportunity to obtain a good deal on student loan debt.  We suggest using one of the many private student loan comparison sites that are available online to find the lender that suits you best, and our research found that Discover private student loans offered attractive rates, the option to defer payments while in school part time, a graduation bonus, and numerous other perks.  Even if you do qualify for public student loans, current rates and terms for private loans make them an attractive option, so keep them in mind when looking at your options for next semester.

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11 Intelligent Ways To Save on Textbooks Without The Bookstore

Textbook prices tend to rise at four times the rate of inflation for an average of $900 per year. It doesn’t take a college education to
figure out there are alternatives to traditional outlets, but incoming freshmen don’t always know the ropes. Here are 11 ways to save this fall — none of which include shopping at the college bookstore.

1. WAIT UNTIL AFTER YOU’VE SEEN THE SYLLABUS
Professors must submit their textbook lists far in advance of the next semester, which means they may never require you even open the book. Talk with your professor in the first few days to determine whether it’s worth shelling out cash for something that may become a paperweight.

2. RENT
Chegg.com, the Netflix of textbooks, started a trend several years ago by allowing students to rent their books. You’ll pay roughly half the purchase price and shipping is often free. Other similar dealers include BookRenter.com and CampusBookRentals.com.

3. WATCH DAILY DEALS
The aforementioned Chegg announced in late May they’d begin offering daily deals targeted at college students. Scheduled to start
in July, the program will begin with offerings from HP, Capital One, MTV, Microsoft and Dr. Pepper. Also keep an eye out for offers
tailored to students by location — possibly even your local bookstore.

4. BUY USED TEXTBOOKS
Used textbook companies have proliferated and even traditional booksellers now both buy and sell used textbooks. The selection has
greatly increased and the prices are far superior to exorbitant college bookstores. Check out Half.com, Textbooks.com and eCampus.com.

5. DOWNLOAD
Few classes require students read every page of a textbook, so why not download the necessary portion from such websites as
CourseSmart.com and Open Courseware from MIT? Project Gutenberg also has scanned in hundreds of free-domain books for use on e-readers.

6. DON’T PURCHASE THE WHOLE PACKAGE
Federal regulations no longer allow publishers to combine textbooks with add-ons, such as CD-ROMs and workbooks. Check with your professor or teaching assistant before you buy the whole bundle.

7. BUY ONLINE
If you want to physically own a new book, buying online often means free shipping and reduced prices. Grab a coupon code from
CouponSherpa.com and shop online at new textbook sellers like Amazon.com, BarnesAndNoble.com and AbeBooks.com.

8. INTERNATIONAL OR OLDER VERSIONS
Non-traditional editions are usually significantly cheaper. There may be some slight changes, but many of these tend to be cosmetic or minor and won’t greatly impact use.

9. SHARE
If you carpool, you know the advantage of splitting the cost of high-ticket expenses. Sharing is easier if you’re in the same study
group and/or see each other frequently.

10. SWAP
Some schools now hold swap meets, where students can trade their old textbooks for the ones they’ll need next year.

11. COMPARE PRICES
You wouldn’t buy a Porsche without shopping around, so do the same with textbooks. Websites such as CampusBooks.com, BigWords.com and AllBookstores.com make the process much easier.

Pop Goes the College Bubble

Enrollment will decline once this becomes common knowledge:

The brutal job market brought on by the recession has been hard on everyone, but especially devastating on the youngest members of the labor force.

About 60% of recent graduates have not been able to find a full-time job in their chosen profession, according to job placement firm Adecco.

And for those just entering the workplace, a bout of long-term unemployment can affect their career plans for years to come.

I have two friends from college who graduated recently. One of them has an Associate’s in graphics design; the other has a dual-major Bachelor’s in graphics design and business administration with a minor in marketing. They both work at Target. They both have tens of thousands of dollars in student debt.
I have another friend who graduated a year ago with an Associate’s in network security. He makes minimum wage working at Walmart and pays $400+ per month on his student loans.
These guys are relatively intelligent and quite hard-working and reliable. They are educated. And they work crap jobs because they have to pay off a ton of debt that they accrued pursuing a piece of paper that hasn’t actually improved their job prospects.
And so, my advice to any all high school seniors is this: when you graduate, get jobs anywhere you can and forget about going to college. Look into an apprenticeship, if possible. Alternatively, learn a trade and start developing work contacts. College is not worth the cost anymore, unless you’re going into a hard science or engineering. Medicine is socialized, so avoid it all costs.
Computer science is mostly overrated because you can learn everything you need to know online. Everything else is B.S.
If you go to college, you will have debt that you cannot ever default out of; you have to pay it back. You will lose at least four years of your life. And on top of all this, you are not more employable with your degree than you were as a high school graduate. There are better things to do with your life than earn a college degree.

What Is the Price of College?

Nothing local in it, but a new report out from the Department of Education worth a scan: What Is the Price of College? Someone must have state breakdowns for what they are reporting on, but I am too lazy to go look.

Now isn’t that more productive than talking about pensions and/or parking?  At least I didn’t waste my time going down to watch this hearing which was scheduled for today.  I guess it happened, but with a very different set of arguments.  Is fascinating pondering why the shift?  Did the firefighters not like the idea of setting a precedent for judicial involvement in management of the city?  Do they know something we don’t? i.e. Is there some other path that is going to move the train from its course…. not many working days left to effect most anything at this point, but never say never.  or was the legal argument just that weak that it forced a last minute withdrawal.  Where is that lawyer/blogger?

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Human Capital, Labor Market and Economic Growth

The OECD recently published the international comparison of the gap in employment rates between university graduates and workers with secondary education or less (link). There is no single exception to the fact that the employment rate is the highest in the group of individuals with college and university degree. Nonetheless, the comparison of the variation in employment rate in the cross section of OECD countries is very interesting.

Among the OECD countries (link), Iceland enjoys the highest employment rate (94.7 percent) of those with college or university degree followed by Switzerland (93.9 percent), Norway (92 percent) and Denmark (91.4 percent). The lowest employment rate for university graduates in 2008 was in Turkey (81.4 percent), Italy (86.5 percent), Israel (86.6 percent) and Greece (87.2 percent). In contrast, the employment rate for those below the secondary education is the lowest in Slovakia (39 percent), Hungary (47.5 percent), Poland (55 percent) and Czech Republic (57.4 percent).

The persistence of high unemployment rate for those below the secondary education degree is a broad outline of the findings from the course of labor economics. The human capital, defined as the stock of years of education per capita, is highly positively correlated with career earnings. The evolution of human capital across the countries has been a subject of debate on economic growth. The empirical study by Robert Barro and Jong-Wha Lee (link) has shown that, for instance, upper secondary school attendence by males has a significant long-term impact on the economic growth. The level of education, sustained by the years of schooling, is not a sole determinant of economic growth in the international perspective. Although, the economic growth is strongly positively correlated with the average years of schooling, the relationship is less powerful considering different parameters of the educational attainment. In the Barro-Lee dataset (link), there is a significant variation between the share of female population that enrolled in a tertiary education and the share of female that completed the tertiary degree. The difference is significant not only in the cross section but also in the country-based time series.

By far the highest tertiary degree completion rate for females has been present in Australia, Canada, Ireland, New Zealand and the United States. Among other countries, the completion rate of Iceland and the Netherlands has been significantly higher compared to the countries of the Continental and Mediterranean Europe. The rate of return to an additional year of schooling significantly differed across countries and across the level of education. For instance, Barro and Lee estimated that the rate of return is the highest at the tertiary level (17.9 percent per annum) compared to the secondary level (10 percent) while the rate of return from an additional year of schooling at the primary level is statistically insignificant from zero. The picture shows the regional variation in the average rate of return from an additional year of schooling.

Rate of return from an additional year of schooling across the world
Source: R. Barro & J.W Lee: Educational Attainment in the World, 1950-2010 (link)

The creation of human capital is essential to higher economic growth. Ultimately, the investment in human capital is the essential means of higher standard of living in poor countries. An interesting theoretical question is what could account for a divergence across the countries? Considering the relevant economic theory as well as scholarly contributions to the theory and empirics of economic growth, there are several factors that explain the significance of divergence in the rate of return from an additional year of education.

First, the impact of behavioral patterns on education and labor market decisions explains a pretty large part of the difference between the effect of education and labor market structure on the rate of return from schooling. Although the field of behavioral economics (link) is still a largely evolving discipline within the economics, the existing empirical studies of the effects of institutional variables on education outcome try to capture these effects by different proxies such as the estimates of political freedom, the rule of law and civil liberties. The changes in the return to education may be related to these factors since the relative worth of education in regions such as Sub-Saharan Africa and Latin America may incur high opportunity cost given the payoff from predatory behavior or working in the informal sector of the economy.

Second, general and firm-specific human capital investment, the increase in college premium and the enormous increase in female labor force participation help explain high rate of return from an additional year of schooling in advanced countries and East Asia. In particular, East Asian tigers were able to sustain high economic growth rates partly because of well-trained and educated labor force able to use the modern technologies. The resulting outcome of the Asian economic miracles has been a steady growth in output per worker and a gradual convergence of wage rates in South Korea and Japan to the level of U.S. According to Kevin Murphy and Finis Welch (link), the premium of getting a college education in the U.S in 1980s was 67 percent. The growth in college and university attendence rates is largely explained by the robust increase in tertiary education premium.

And third, greater labor force participation of women has also led to higher rates of college and university attendence. In spite the persistent male-female pay gap, women have experienced a tremendous increase in lifetime earnings as a consequence of higher rates of college and university attendence. The persistence of the male-female pay gap can be explained by the rewards to education rather than by inherent gender bias. The U.S. Census published the relevant data (link) on the distribution of female earnings. In 2003, the female earnings of high school graduates in the 25-34 age thresold represented 78 percent of average male earnings. The earnings of the same female age thresold with bachelor’s degree represented 89 percent of male earnings and 71 percent for those female with master’s degree. What accounts for the gender earnings gap across the levels of age and education is the asymmetric self-selection that led to dispersed gender distribution of relative earnings. Men usually self-select into the areas of work requiring a significant amount of risk-taking and rather uncertain payoffs while the female labor market pattern is inclined towards less risk-taking and greater certainty regarding the stability of lifetime earnings.

The data by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (link) published in 2003, showed that female-to-male earnings ratio in high-paying jobs is the lowest in the field of chief executives where female earnings represented 80 percent of average male earnings in the same field of occupation. On average, the female-to-male earnings ratio declined in low-paying occupations such as cashiers (93 percent), cooks (91 percent), food preparation (93 percent) and hand packaging (101 percent). Contrary to the popular perception, female earnings in the field of computer systems management and legal industry represented 91 percent of average male earnings while the highest ratio in high-paying occupations was recorded in pharmaceutical industry (92 percent).

Indeed, there is a persistent and historically lowest male-female earnings gap. But, as the labor economic theory of human capital predicts, the gender pay difference reflects different cognitive abilities and preferences of occupational selection considering the degree of risk-taking and payoff uncertainty. Even the international test scores (link) confirmed that advantage of female cognitive abilities comprehends in verbal reasoning and reading skills (link) while the cognitive abilities of male are more inclined towards the use of computer technology (link) and mathematics (link).

Even in a cross-country perspective, the gender wage differential persists. The gap, defined as the female-male ratio, ranges from 0.9 in France to 0.7 in Canada. The gender wage differential is a cross section of major economies is shown in the table below.

The Gender Earnings Gap Across Countries

Source: F.D Blau & L.M Kahn, Gender Differences in Pay, 2000

The set of different institutional characteristics of labor market in different countries could easily complement the productivity growth rates as to explain the evolution of wage differential across countries. Even though wage rates are primarily determined by the productivity growth, the existence of collective bargaining schemes and rigid labor market mechanism determining wage rate and total compensation can add significantly to the enforcement of particular labor market policies affecting gender bias in wage determination. In the United States and other advanced countries, the main cause of the wider gender earnings gap is a significant gap between college education premium and high school premium. In addition, reductions in personal income tax rates furthermore increase the rewards to college education relative to the education levels of high school or less – which, by the empirical evidence, seems to be the main determinant of earnings gap in the labor market of advanced countries.

Earnings and Education: A Survey

In 2009, the median weekly earnings of workers with bachelor’s degrees were $1,137. This amount is 1.8 times the average amount earned by those with only a high school diploma, and 2.5 times the earnings of high school dropouts (link).