Bernie Sanders at a May news conference to support legislation "to eliminate undergraduate tuition at public colleges and universities and to expand work-study programs." (Photo By Tom Williams/CQ Roll Call via Getty)
The United States' collective student loan debt was up to $1.3 trillion as of last summer, and it's set to double by 2025. Paying off the kind of large loan that many millennials have had to take on to finance their educations would be challenging in normal circumstances, but with flat wages it can be a near impossibility. Many struggle just to make their interest payments. The worst-case long-term scenario is that their debt will scare them away from taking out credit cards and building up a good FICO score, which will in turn prevent them from purchasing houses. Rents stay high, wages stay low, and money that might have gone into a retirement account or paid down a mortgage has over the years gone to paying for a degree."In the traditional middle-class dream, wealth comes from your home and retirement savings," said Nick Clements, who was the head of credit card businesses at Citibank and Barclays before starting his own finance blog. "The longer you wait to start building these assets, the poorer you will be."Related: What Would Happen if I Just Stopped Paying My Student Loans?Clement, who has spent most of his career trying to get people into debt, could not (or wouldn't) speculate about the long-term effects of the student loan crisis. But whatever those consequences will be, reducing student debt should be a top priority for anyone who cares about lifting young people into the middle class.
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