How student-loan debt is dragging down the economy
The 90-day delinquency rate for student loans has risen to 11.3%. For context: The rate for mortgages has dropped to about 3.1%, and credit-card delinquencies have reached historical lows, according to the Fed.
One fact: Delinquency is not limited to borrowers who took out huge loans to attend law or medical schools, according to William Elliot, director of the School of Social Welfare at the University of Kansas.
"What's interesting is that it's not just people with high amounts of debt having delinquency problems," Elliot told Business Insider. "Even people with only $5,000 or $10,000 are still going delinquent."The hardest-hit age group, according to the chart below, has been people in their 30s. Thirty-somethings have seen their outstanding student loans nearly triple since 2014 as they returned to college during the downturn or attended graduate school because loans became more accessible.Student loan debt, more than any other kind, contributes to people having less favorable views on their own financial well-being, according to Elliot, which is why the dramatic rise in borrowing for school over the last decade by more than 40 million Americans may be hindering economic recovery."If large and increasing numbers of student borrowers default on their loans, the resultant damage to their credit ratings would likely preclude home-secured borrowing in the tight lending environment that has prevailed for the last several years," according to the Fed.Elliot largely agreed with this sentiment."People are less likely to own homes or have retirement savings - by significant amounts," he said.O'Neill reinforced this point."Baby boomers can't sell houses because millennials can't afford to buy them, that's huge," she said. "The clearly is a relationship there - just talk to anybody trying to sell a home."Elliot warned that no study has proved the direct correlation between student-loan debts and a drag on the economy, but agreed that the debts are associated with bad outcomes that can lead to less spending."It's a drag on the economy because purchases aren't being made," said O'Neill. "It's probably dragging down our GDP."The less people spend, the slower the economy's recovery will be.