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Originally Posted by Rodney
The article really underrates the impact of student loans. If you successful enter a higher-paying profession like IT, maybe you'll be able to put money away and pay off the loans.
But if you're, for example, going into some worthy profession that doesn't pay so well, how the heck are you going to put money away _and_ pay off those loans, much less have something resembling a life much less start a family for the first five-ten years after school? If ever?
Some professions like teaching do offer a pension for those that stay the long haul. But even then I've seen a lot of people leave the profession because even with retirement theoretically covered, there wasn't enough to lead a life, buy a house, raise a family, or anything else.
You can say, well, then, they shouldn't choose to be teachers. Maybe so, but then society's in trouble -- or now only people who are already well off can make a life as teachers in some areas. Which means, again, that society's in trouble.
To paraphrase somebody else, you can't live your whole life for the last 20 years of your life. All the rules in the article are well and good, but the fact is that society has changed over the last 30 years, and the individual has to handle much more by himself or herself than he or she had to. (People had pensions, tuition was close to free or cheap aid was easily available, medical insurance was easy to get) And individual virtue can only do so much to counter society-wide changes.
All that said, those lattes _do_ add up :-).
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I have a fair chunk of debt racked up in student loans. Yet I am paying them down every month even though I'm making half what I will make 2 years from now (once I get into/complete my Master's in Teaching), or even what I could make somewhere else (the job market here sucks). Fortunately I live in a part of the country where cost of living is still relatively low and teaching is (especially in Washington State) reasonably funded. Furthermore, in both Washington and Oregon, teachers are part of the state employee retirement system--so once I'm locked in (and I plan on staying in) my retirement is pretty much in the bag.
My financial priorities run thusly:
1) Pay down my existing student loan debt (while avoiding other debt).
2) Build up a cushion of savings.
3) Save for the future (children, retirement, etc).
After working this year in low-wage jobs--there are a lot of people worse off than teachers, and who do equally noble work.