Sunday, April 30, 2017

It’s a Good Time to Trade Your Student Debt for Home Debt


This article talks about how Fannie Mae is taking steps to make it easier for many student loan borrowers to own a home and refinance a mortgage.  Millions of people have student debt ($30,000+ on average), which has become a large concern because those loans have postponing home buying and causing a drag on the economy.  As an attempt to decrease the concern and fix the drag on the economy, Fannie Mae stated that it was easing the path for student loan borrowers in a few different ways.  First, it is expanding its cash-out mortgage refinance option.  This will let borrowers trade high-rate student loan debt for lower-rate home loans.  Second, borrowers applying for a mortgage may now avoid debt being paid by others from their applications.  The third change helps those with student loans and who are on flexible payment programs by tying monthly loan payments to a borrower’s income.  It will be interesting to see how these changes work out and if they will actually solve the issue.  These changes were announced on Tuesday and are effective immediately.


4 comments:

Unknown said...

This is of extreme concern to all of us, students, due to the fact that, even though loans and state intervention stretch the possibility of accessible education to all, a counteracting factor plays a key role when students graduate swamped in debt and have to deal with such economic burden. The start of the "real world" for many of us seem to kick off on the negative spectrum, with loans to be paid, deviating our attention to a crucial beginning.

Unknown said...

Those in the bottom 20 percent will always be at a disadvantage in some ways. I believe that those in the top 20 percent live longer because they can afford healthier lifestyles, but it does not necessarily mean that those in the bottom 20 percent cannot choose to live differently in order to increase life expectancy. Unless we can find a way to incentivize people to live healthier lifestyles,this trend will continue and increasing the age would lift some burden, but also put many in a very poor situation.

Unknown said...

In a report released last summer Goldman Sachs argued student debt only has a significant impact on home ownership when the borrower has more than $50,000 in debt or is making payments that exceed 5% of their income. The low ownership rate among millennials could be caused by other factors, not just student loans.

Anonymous said...

It seems like a good way to make college a little more affordable, but I can't be certain. The bottom 20% isn't gaining much out of it though so it's hard to say how effective it will be in getting lower income people an affordable education.