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Korean Job Discussion Forums "The Internet's Meeting Place for ESL/EFL Teachers from Around the World!"
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Moldy Rutabaga

Joined: 01 Jul 2003 Location: Ansan, Korea
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Posted: Tue Dec 13, 2005 4:44 am Post subject: |
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What you call "saner" countries -- countries that give the gift of education to their young people without asking for the money to be repaid -- are paying for it in other ways, namely high taxes (and as in the case of France, riots and civil unrest!).
In Canada do you borrow directly from your government? Or is it like the US system where you borrow from a bank and the government guarantees it? |
I do not see how I can make this clearer. I haven't suggested that countries give young people a loan without asking for it to be repaid; only that the system of repayment is deeply flawed. It may not be consistent with "real world" business loans-- but student loans, I think, are by nature unusual government loans made to youngsters who would otherwise be bad risks in that they have no collateral. To me this suggests that the system of repayment should also be special; and in practical terms, waiting for a graduate to get a "real" job instead of creating a bureacracy of immediately hounding him or her for repayment, and forcing him/her into default would be cheaper and have better financial results. I have not ever stated that the loan never ought to be repaid. I owed the money, and when I could I paid it back.
The system in Canada used to be that the bank gave the loan and was guaranteed by the government. Lately the banks seem to have gotten tired of the student loan business and now (to my knowledge) a private loan company funds the loans, which are still guaranteed by government. I am not sure if this is better or worse than the American system, although US universities do generally offer a much wider array of scholarships, internships, and other forms of support than Canadian ones do.
Ken:> |
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joe_doufu

Joined: 09 May 2005 Location: Elsewhere
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Posted: Tue Dec 13, 2005 6:06 am Post subject: |
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| Moldy Rutabaga wrote: |
| I do not see how I can make this clearer. I haven't suggested that countries give young people a loan without asking for it to be repaid; only that the system of repayment is deeply flawed. It may not be consistent with "real world" |
I don't see how I can make this clearer. What you are asking for is a special favor, not something that you should take for granted. The government had already made huge sacrifices (of taxpayers' money) for your benefit, and you're asking them to give you even more.
People are willing to make sacrifices for the young generation's education and you can certainly ask them to give more. Your attitude, however, needs adjustment. You've been given a tremendous gift by your fellow countrymen, and you're here complaining and insulting them (they're not "sane" etc) because you wanted a better gift. |
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Moldy Rutabaga

Joined: 01 Jul 2003 Location: Ansan, Korea
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Posted: Tue Dec 13, 2005 6:03 pm Post subject: |
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I am not asking for more. In a way, I am asking for less. If there was an automatic mechanism of paycheque reductions for student loan repayments, all of the minions employed to hunt down graduates in default and all of the money lost by the government in contracting out to collection agencies would be saved. I would still pay every penny of the loan. And because my credit rating wouldn't be shot, I would be more likely to buy a house or car and participate in the local economy.
Student loans are not a gift from the Good Samaritans in Ottawa or Washington; they are an investment that benefits the country in most cases, as in our lifetimes graduates statistically pay more taxes and contribute back to the economy. They are also certainly not a gift if we pay them back with interest at prime plus five, as I am.
Ken:> |
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joe_doufu

Joined: 09 May 2005 Location: Elsewhere
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Posted: Tue Dec 13, 2005 7:53 pm Post subject: |
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| Moldy Rutabaga wrote: |
| I am not asking for more. In a way, I am asking for less. |
You are asking for them to eat the cost of the loan. Money is not free. The bank is paying interest on their money, that's why they need to charge interest on their money. If they allow you to pay the loan at your own pace they are eating that cost for your benefit. I'm sorry I didn't realize you don't understand basic finance.
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| If there was an automatic mechanism of paycheque reductions for student loan repayments, all of the minions employed to hunt down graduates in default and all of the money lost by the government in contracting out to collection agencies would be saved. |
Banks don't "track you down" or contract out to collection agencies because it's fun for them. They do that because it's the best way to recover as much as possible of a bad loan from a deadbeat borrower. You're asking for even more bureaucracy, not less.
As I said, someday Canada may grant its student borrowers all that you desire, but your attitude is the problem. Insulting people while asking them for a favor rarely works. |
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Dysupes

Joined: 24 May 2005
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Posted: Tue Dec 13, 2005 9:00 pm Post subject: |
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Joe,
No offense meant here but are you actually reading what he's writing? I'm reading the same things you are and coming out with way less aggressive conclusions. I think that if you have a student loan you should be paying it back. I think that if there's interest to be paid, you should be paying it. Moldy isn't even trying to argue with you about that and yet you seem to be concentrated so doggedly on the idea of not paying what is owed that you don't seem to be listening to anything that he is saying.
If interest is being accrued on a loan, what changes are made when it comes to adjustment of the payment schedule? In truth, no change. So, if interest piles up while the bank is getting a cut of your paycheque then how is the bank eating the cost of the loan? Well, it's simple. They're not. You're still paying every month and hey, if the interest keeps building up the bank would probably be even happier. If you're paying every month, no matter how small an amount, that's still an indication to the bank that they have someone who WANTS to pay and is not going to run away. I think Moldy is simply saying that a bank asking for huge sums immediately after graduation is deluding itself and making more work in the long run while also destroying a potentially beneficial business relationship with that customer.
Now, about banks not "tracking you down" or putting collection agencies on the case for fun, that's not even the issue here. The idea is that if banks took a more well thought out approach to this issue they would realize that not only do they create more bureaucracy and red tape by demanding high sums from people who haven't yet gotten on their feet, they also lose future customers. Like any business, if a bank treats you badly then you move your banking elsewhere. The problem is that banks, and apparently you too, see a newly graduated student not being able to pay exorbitant sums immediately back to the bank as equivalent to a deadbeat borrower. This is aboslutely and unequivocally wrong and is a myth that should be dispelled. There is a mountain of difference between a poor student who can't find a well paying job right after graduation and can't make the big payments the bank is demanding (and therefore makes what smaller payments he can) and a guy who maxes out his credit cards and then refuses to pay back the money he's been loaned. If you can't see the difference then this discussion should perhaps end here. |
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Moldy Rutabaga

Joined: 01 Jul 2003 Location: Ansan, Korea
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Posted: Tue Dec 13, 2005 9:24 pm Post subject: |
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| If they allow you to pay the loan at your own pace they are eating that cost for your benefit. I'm sorry I didn't realize you don't understand basic finance. |
How so? If I ask to begin paying my loan in two years, and agree to pay the interest incurred between now and then, how is the bank or government losing anything? If they set the rate of interest, isn't it in their interest to prolong the payments? You feel I know nothing about finance. Have you ever arranged a home mortgage?
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| Banks don't "track you down" or contract out to collection agencies because it's fun for them. They do that because it's the best way to recover as much as possible of a bad loan from a deadbeat borrower. You're asking for even more bureaucracy, not less. |
How so? Would you propose that, instead of payroll deductions for taxes or other social benefits that the government hire masses of people to call all citizens at 3 AM to demand when they'll pay the year's taxes, and refer them to collection agencies when they can't? We make these payments automatic to avoid such problems-- why not a student loan?
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| As I said, someday Canada may grant its student borrowers all that you desire, but your attitude is the problem. Insulting people while asking them for a favor rarely works. |
How so? How am I insulting my country by suggesting that its financial aid system doesn't work? If I say that the defence system which protects me has problems, or the road system which lets me travel has problems, or the parliament which represents me has problems, or the public school system which gives me free education has problems, am I insulting or being an ingrate? I pay taxes and I work after my education is finished; don't I have a say? The loan wasn't manna from heaven or welfare; it was a government loan that I pay back with interest, and which benefits the government in future when my productivity and taxation increases; don't I have a say?
Thank you, Dysupes; I posted before seeing your entry.
Ken:> |
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joe_doufu

Joined: 09 May 2005 Location: Elsewhere
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Posted: Wed Dec 14, 2005 6:36 am Post subject: |
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You like to refer to your fellow countrymen as "the Government", I think, so you can avoid thinking of them as human beings. When you talk about all the money the government should spend on your behalf, you don't want to think that you're talking about other people's money. Other people who won't "benefit" from your getting a good job and paying them back eventually.
That loan is manna from heaven for you, my friend; you would not have gotten it without an income or collateral except through the benevolence of your nation's taxpayers. You're asking them to continue extending such credit to you at uneconomically-low rates of interest, and to set up a bureaucracy to track how much you (and all the other graduates world-wide) are earning every month and deduct a percentage according to some progressive scale according to "to each according to his need, from each according to his ability".
Now I am not Canadian and I don't speak for its taxpayers. But you ought to consider the possibility that the government has other priorities to spend its money on, and people have good things to spend theirmoney on. You're asking for some more of it to be directed to you, and I think you should come up with a more compelling reason than "it would benefit me". |
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taobenli
Joined: 26 Apr 2004
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Posted: Wed Dec 14, 2005 10:56 am Post subject: |
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Joe doufu-
I think you've been beat...you just keep repeating the same lines, beating your head against the wall, even after the person (and now people) you're arguing against has made new and valid points. I find it odd that you continue in this line of argument, as I have liked most of your other posts and have found you witty and intelligent (not that you should care what I think of you, just saying).
I went to college in the U.S. and took out government Stafford and Perkins loans. I began paying them back but am now in grad school and in deferment. Are people who don't pay back their loans out of some misplaced sense of entitlement scum? Yes. Am I grateful for the opportunity to have received an education and gotten loans at low interest rates? Yes. Does that mean that I don't think the (U.S.) student loan system (or often, lack of a system) has major flaws, and could be improved. No!
I have friends that have been totally screwed over by the American financial aid industry. Yes, it's great that they're lending students money, but they ARE making money in the process, it's not just because they're nice folks. It's great that loans are available, but the bigger problem is that education in the U.S. is incredibly and prohibitively expensive. The fact that someone could incur $120k in four years actually doesn't surprise me that much- I know others who have (not that I'm saying that not paying it is a good option).
What do you think, Joe Dofu? I know nothing about finance, but to me it sounds like the other poster knows more about finance than you...
taobenli |
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Dan The Chainsawman

Joined: 05 May 2005
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Posted: Wed Dec 14, 2005 5:49 pm Post subject: |
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Yet even in the states you can apply for a variety of mechanisms to forbear payments, to get deferments, and consolidate your loans at a lower interest rate. It is also possible to get payment plans extending longer periods of time contingent on income. For the most part being in the hock to the US government is not all that bad as they have worked with me on more than one occasion when I had trouble meeting my full payment amount, or just could not do it at all.
In the end the loan is still paid for in full, one way or another. |
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joe_doufu

Joined: 09 May 2005 Location: Elsewhere
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Posted: Wed Dec 14, 2005 6:49 pm Post subject: |
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| taobenli wrote: |
| Joe doufu-I think you've been beat...you just keep repeating the same lines, beating your head against the wall, |
That's exactly what it feels like. The rutabaga guy really thinks that those banks should spend money on his behalf, but that this is really all to their own benefit because it's funding the lifestyle of a handsome young Canadian. I guess you're right, it doesn't make sense to keep repeating the same [principles of basic finance] lines anymore... |
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Moldy Rutabaga

Joined: 01 Jul 2003 Location: Ansan, Korea
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Posted: Wed Dec 14, 2005 7:36 pm Post subject: |
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| handsome young Canadian |
Well, thank you.. but wrong on the first two.
Ken:> |
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Dysupes

Joined: 24 May 2005
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Posted: Wed Dec 14, 2005 8:22 pm Post subject: |
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Joe,
I really like the majority of your posts on here but I gotta say that you haven't got a leg left to stand on here. You keep repeating your line about "the principles of basic finance" and refuse to accept that these ARE the rules of basic finance! As a bank, I want my money. If I can pile interest on top of interest on top of interest on some poor schmo who's living from paycheque to paycheque anyway and yet still keeps paying as much as he can, I'm laughing! Banks want their money and as much interest as they can get. What moldy is talking falls entirely in line with this objective. C'mon, dude, grab a clue!  |
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Dysupes

Joined: 24 May 2005
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Posted: Wed Dec 14, 2005 8:23 pm Post subject: |
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Joe,
I really like the majority of your posts on here but I gotta say that you haven't got a leg left to stand on here. You keep repeating your line about "the principles of basic finance" and refuse to accept that these ARE the rules of basic finance! As a bank, I want my money. If I can pile interest on top of interest on top of interest on some poor schmo who's living from paycheque to paycheque anyway and yet still keeps paying as much as he can, I'm laughing! Banks want their money and as much interest as they can get. What moldy is talking about falls entirely in line with this objective. C'mon, dude, grab a clue!  |
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