Sunday, September 30, 2018

My Money Mistakes: Student Loans

One of my early money mistakes was my student loans. Although they weren’t my first money mistake, they were definitely my first big mistake.

First, I chose a field in college that could easily be described as a “hopes and dreams” field. I don’t want to say what the major was, but let’s just say that taking out loans for it was dumb. For some salt in the wound, because I came from a relatively poor household, I got grants and scholarships high enough to cover the costs and living expenses of college. Let me repeat that: I got enough financial aid and merit scholarships to go to school for free, and I still took out student loans in addition.

You can see why I consider this my first big mistake.

Over the course of my undergrad years, I amassed a total of around $22,000 in student loans. I also took out some credit cards during that time and often carried a balance.

In the summer before my final year, it hit me that I was reaching the end of college, and that I had this giant debt and no idea what to do next. I know, I know. I listened to the Dave Ramsey show a bit today, and there are debts that are much greater than my $22k. Compared to someone who's amassed a $600k student loan sum, my amount sounds paltry. But that's also a danger of making comparisons like that: $22,000 is a lot of money for someone in his 20's who graduated with an impractical degree. In any case, it felt like a lot.

In my last year, I applied myself seriously at school. I'd been an OK student before, but in my last year I really tried. In so doing, I made contacts that would ultimately lead to real career advancement later. The loan amount climbed though as I took out my final loans for my undergrad years.

By the end, I had the previously quoted $22k debt. Around $1500 was in an unsubsidized loan, while the others were all subsidized. That was a bit of accidental good luck.

In the intervening years before moving abroad, I went to graduate school paid for with a teaching assistant position, and I did a variety of jobs, some of which were related to my field and some not. I consolidated all my student loans at a 7% interest rate right before the financial crisis caused interest rates to drop to basically nothing. I used tools like Upromise to shuttle extra pennies into the loans, and I used Sallie Mae's offers to lower the interest rate after a certain number of on-time payments and with automatic withdrawal.

The payment plan I'd selected meant that the payments were interest-only for a decade or something crazy. However, I tried making whatever extra payments I could to lower the principle enough that the scheduled payment amount would also take off at least some of the principle.

While I worked in graduate school, the loans went into subsidized deferment even though I was earning a very modest salary. I used that time to keep paying money into the loans, and left graduate school with a lower principle amount. I also opened my Roth IRA at that time.

I listened to Dave Ramsey and tried to get the "baby steps" thing going, but what ultimately got the loans paid off was two things:

  • The habits and the desire to pay the loans off that built up while I was essentially broke.
  • Getting a job that paid me a lot more money.

I would have eventually paid off the loans on my previous track, but it would have taken decades. I was dedicated though. All that was missing was the income to get the job done, and I got that moving to Germany. When I look at our net worth chart, I'm shocked at how quickly things changed once we had a steady situation. We went from a negative net worth of $23k when we moved here to a positive net worth of around $16k in two years.

I think there are a lot of warnings one can take away from this. The first: avoid debt. Just dodge the bullet, and you won't have to waste time trying to heal the wound.

The second: earning power is important. My degree was a silly degree to go into debt for. I don't regret the degree itself because my life is good, but I sat in negative net worth territory for too long, and a lot of my earned money went to interest payments. That's money that Sallie Mae gets to loan out now and earn income on.

Meanwhile, because my income was so low so often, I often had credit cards that needed to be taken care whenever I got enough money for debt-paydown times. I wanted to be done with the student loans, and looking back, I had periods where I intelligently managed my money, but lack of steady income plus debt equaled lots of squandered time as income came and went along with emergency funds.

The third lesson is that learning to live frugally is worthwhile from as early an age as possible. I got serious about saving money once I left school. I still made plenty of mistakes from that point, but I was beginning the saving practice in earnest then. If only that could have been shifted to when I was 16 and earning my first paychecks from my fast-food job. I had friends who already did have a savings mindset and who saved up thousands before leaving high school just from side jobs.

And the fourth I'll list is this: student loan debt can be paid off. You can get rid of it. You can do it pretty quickly too if you set your mind to it, earn enough, and spend it frugally. Just get it done and move on. When you make the final payment, you sadly won't get a screen full of balloons and a giant "Congratulations!", but it's something that you'll never have to worry about again.

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