Student loan debt surges for senior
citizens
When they
should be worrying about affording retirement, a growing number of senior
citizens are drowning in student loan debt instead.
Between 2005
and 2013, student loan debt among seniors 65 and older rose by more than 600%
from $2.8 billion to $18 billion, according to a new report from the Government
Accountability Office. Out of all
student debt holders, seniors still account for a small percentage. But their
ranks are growing rapidly -- quadrupling in size since 2004 to 706,000
households.
While the
majority of debt, about 80%, owed by seniors comes from loans taken out to fund
their own college educations, 20% of loans were taken out for a child or
dependent, according to the GAO report.
At age 57,
Rosemary Anderson is approaching retirement age with $152,000 in student loan
debt.
Twenty years
ago, she took out $65,000 in loans in order to pay for her bachelor's and
master's degrees. But after getting divorced, losing her job and caring for her
sick brother, she basically gave up on making payments. She was hit hard by
interest and penalties and the amount she owes has since climbed by tens of
thousands of dollars.
40 million
Americans now have student loan debt.
CNNMoney
profiled Anderson last month, and she testified at a congressional hearing
about older Americans with student debt on Wednesday.
"I will
be indebted for life," Anderson said in her testimony. "I find it
very ironic that I incurred this debt as a way to improve my life, and yet I
sit here today because the debt has become my undoing."
Default
rates have also been rising with a debtor's age, the report found. While only
12% of federal student loans belonging to people ages 25 to 49 were in default
in 2013, that rate spiked to 27% for Americans between 65 and 74 years old, and
to more than 50% for people 75 and older.
Retirees'
Social Security checks garnished for student loans.
Failing to
pay back these loans can have dire consequences. Lenders will even take a bite
out of Social Security payments to get the money they're owed.
Last year,
156,000 Americans had their Social Security benefits garnished because they had
student loans that were in default, according to analysis conducted by the U.S.
Treasury for CNNMoney. That's triple the 47,500 people who had payments
garnished in 2006.
"Some
may think of student loan debt as just a young person's problem," said
Senate Special Committee on Aging Chairman Bill Nelson. "Well, as it turns
out, that's increasingly not the case."
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