And for every rich person, there's 19 more that got screwed one way or another with scholastic loans.
The last major age generation (the ones who are in their 50's to 60's) pulled the ladder up on us millenials. Ive heard the stories that college education in the '60s and '70s were affordable to the point that a summer job would cover 100% of the expenses. Instead, I ended up in $30k in debt.
The debt is a fact of life. And so is the likelihood that social security will not be there when/if I retire. The age keeps moving up and up, which is a form of generational theft.
Next time, try depersonalizing these types of articles. The problem of higher ed debt is a scary $1 trillion behemoth with no end in sight. When that bubble bursts, we all should worry.
Then these articles should use a range of people who have actual problems rather than a single person (whose name is in the title! can't get more personal than that) who is being an idiot.
My wife accumulated about 30k in debt, through EducationOne. It was guaranteed through TERI.
We chose a private lender specifically because at the time (early 2000s) private loans were dischargeable in bankruptcy and we wanted a hedge against the possibility that she might fail in her career. We accepted a significantly higher interest rate for that reason alone. They changed the law and now they're not dischargeable.
Luckily, TERI itself filed for bankruptcy and didn't keep good records. They'd sold the loans but the records showing assignment to the new entity apparently don't exist. We stopped paying on them, they filed suit, and we demanded that they prove ownership of the debt. They withdrew the suit, and the statute of limitations has since expired.
I don’t disagree at all on the size but I wouldn’t classify it as a mansion just a big house. As a Utahn who works remotely with lots of people from the coasts. I feel its my duty to mention Utah isn’t as cheap as they think it is ha.
How does the US stay competitive with these salaries? In most of Europe it's very rare to make over 100k, and exceedingly rare to have a salary over 200k. As a counterbalance the employer side costs are larger of course, but I would assume the employer total cost difference is considerable anyway.
This is a really huge issue but I think one critical component should be how much the university can charge you once you’ve enrolled. I think the university should be restricted from increasing your tuition after enrollment. It should stay the same through graduation, and no additional fees or anything can be added. You’re willing to make a commitment to the school, they should be willing to make a commitment to you.
I agree that would be nice, but wouldn't the college/university forecast the estimated cost of tuition over the next 4 years, and factor in an estimated inflation amount? Then they would evenly divide the result. I guess my point is, I don't think it would save the student any money. But I could be wrong, what do you think?
One thing the article didn't mention, that would be interesting to consider is the inflation rate of tuition from the time he was 17 until the time he graduated. I'm estimating based on other research that it was likely between 8%-10%. That means the cost of his education would be roughly 50% more than he originally expected.
Factor to multiply cost is 2.2 =(1.09^9)
Figure it was increasing at a steady state so you could split the difference. Even if he had looked at salaries originally, then backed in to the price using normal (not education) inflation, he would have dramatically underestimated his exit cost.
I do not feel a whit of sympathy for this guy. He can afford to pay, but he doesn't. That's why his debt is so high. If he had left his loans unconsolidated and made aggressive payments, he'd be a good deal down the road toward fixing his debt situation. Instead, he seems intent on allowing it to grow as large as possible.
(Edit: I'll note that it's just like the WSJ to pick the least sympathetic possible face of a real social problem that probably ought to see some government action to fix.)
Agreed. He also made some frankly bad financial choices along the way: Taking out student loans to pay for the $1,800/month apartment they were renting, putting off paying the loans for a year+ while the interest accrued, buying a house while still having all this debt so that they could "live comfortably", etc.
Dental school is expensive, I get it. He wouldn't have to be here if he made some better financial decisions though.
In the end it's going to be the taxpayers taking the hit, however - apparently he's part of a program that will forgive the debt in 25 years.
So, he borrows $600K to attend 7 years of school starting at age 24 and he makes $225K now at age 37 with 2 children and a $1M debt that he only pays $1600/month on? Doesn't he take home in the ball park of $10k/month?
Yeah, so 16% of his income is a pretty sizable chunk for something like loan payback, considering most people making around that are paying probably 30% for rent or mortgage, and then there are car payments or transit costs, kids, life expenses...
The purpose of a student loan is to finance an education, not to enslave a person trying to better themselves and lock up all their income just to satisfy greedy banks.
One of my coworkers (younger fellow, 28-29 or something) has a six digit loan and pays 700-something a month, which is around 20% of what he most likely makes. He doesn't have any kids though, so he can afford to overpay like that, for now.
student loans are a shark industry in america, idc what anybody says. Preying on the people in society attempting to be the most productive, it's awful. That the guy in tfa has a medium-to-high income shouldn't really matter. The student loan should be a tool of utility for the learner, not a tool of profit maximization for the bank.
Exactly. He could pay the loan back in a few years if he tried to do so. He is paying back ~10%.
There comes a point when you don't need to spend all your cash . Someone making 225k can pay back a far greater % than someone making 100k can. Live within your means, pay back the money you owe in a few years, and then you will be far ahead. He has simply chosen not to do that.
You borrow $600,000 to pursue you dream education. You earn more money than 95% of all Americans. You live in a "seemingly" nice neighborhood in a home that costs $400,000.
My high school friend who knows him professionally claims he spends a lot of time putting skiing videos on Instagram and even has sponsors. Maybe he should hit them up.
I'm honestly surprised there are only 101 people in this sort of situation. And this guy, frankly, doesn't seem to be doing that bad. Big debt, but controlled such that he seems to otherwise have a nice home, happy family, good business, etc.
I’m familiar with the suburb that Mr. Meru lives in. Moving 20 minutes in any direction would free up substantial capital for him to pay his debts on a 225K salary (particularly because real estate is red hot in Utah at the moment probably also equity to be had on his 750k+ house).
Why should he pay it back? He wanted leverage, they are giving him leverage. He wants to take a flier on a home that could appreciate significantly. That's the risk when you make a loan.
My wife has $4000,000 med school loans. We are on PSLF and payments are 10% of (adjusted gross income minus 150% fed poverty line). She’s an attending now and we do everything we can to decrease our adjusted gross income. Our payments do not cover interest on the loans. The balance increases each month.
In 8 years, if everything goes according to plan, her loans will be forgiven and be near $600,000. It’d be a lot more cost effective for society to just offer free med school and lower doctors’ wages. But our society has opted for inefficiency. Her large doctor salary is necessary to pay for her schooling but when the loans are paid off her salary won’t decline.
It should have but she wasn’t aware of the program until after we met. I researched her options and PSLF is the best one. She works at a Hospital and thus has qualifying employment.
going from a world of fixed costs and variable income to a tar pit of proportional costs everywhere: tuition proportional to future earnings, SAAS software, monthly fee at the bank, hard to break leases (eating a part of the increase in salary you will make by moving).
I don't see how the fact that this guy is making a lot of money now is relevant. The ultra high cost of education creates a huge gap between people who are born into rich families and can afford a $1M price tag and ones who aren't and would need to pay loans for decades after they finish school. (That is if like this guy, they are lucky enough and can land a good paying job, which isn't always the case)
Guy is using a government loan forgiveness program.
He'll pay "10% of his discretionary income, defined as adjusted gross income minus 150% of the poverty level. Any balance remaining after 25 years is forgiven, effectively covered by taxpayers. The forgiven amount is then taxed as ordinary income."
Don't get me wrong, dental school is stupid expensive (forecast from USC was ~450k) but this guy has the financial acumen of a brick. You don't buy a new house, Tesla, and take vacations to Havana with that much debt, while simultaneously pushing the burden for your schooling onto everyone else.
Sounds like he's doing the smart thing at this point, doesn't it? He borrowed over $600,000. By the end of the 25 year period he'll likely have paid back less than the original principal.
"Since refinancing his debt with the federal government in 2015, lowering the rate to 7.25%, Mr. Meru’s balance has grown by $148,948. It will keep growing through the 25-year life of the repayment plan until it reaches $2 million. That sum will be forgiven and, at current tax rates, could cost Mr. Meru more than $700,000 in income tax payments.
By then, Mr. Meru will have paid $1.6 million. That would be about the same as repaying his $600,000 in student loans at a rate of 4% over 25 years, said Jason Delisle, a student-loan expert with the American Enterprise Institute, a conservative think tank. The biggest factor in Mr. Meru’s runaway debt, he said, was a high principal combined with long periods when Mr. Meru made no payments."
I think the article is saying that had he received a loan at a 4% rate for 25 years he would paid the same amount toward the bill as he is currently doing for loans at a 7.25% rate with loan forgiveness at the end. The 4% is a hypothetical rate, not a real one. Though he did have at least one student loan at a rate of less than 5%. Most student loans are made up of smaller loans. For example, my wife's "student loan" is $100k, but it is made up of 8 loans of 4k to 30k with varying interest rates of 3% to 6.5%. Rates increase every couple of years. To be clear, federal loans are fixed rate loans, but each year you are in school, you may incur new, higher rate loans than the year before.
His first loans were probably 4%. In 2007-8, all loan rates doubled to predatory levels, along side the cost of tuition. He got a doctorate, thats like 8-10 years. Federal loans get cut off at about $27k. So, he likely got private loans with interests rates upward of 8%, loans were purchased by the DOE and he was able to consolidate to a lower rate based on the amount he owed each lender and their respective interest rates. I pay 6.25% because I have autopay and getba discount. Doesn't change the $300/mo interest I accrue monthly
His first loans were probably 4%. In 2007-8, all loan rates doubled to predatory levels, along side the cost of tuition. He got a doctorate, thats like 8-10 years. Federal loans get cut off at about $27k. So, he likely got private loans with interests rates upward of 8%, loans were purchased by the DOE and he was able to consolidate to a lower rate based on the amount he owed each lender and their respective interest rates. I pay 6.25% because I have autopay and getba discount. Doesn't change the $300/mo interest I accrue monthly.
I borrowed $32k was expected to pay near $700/mo on the 10 yr plan. Graduated in 2009 when everyone lost their jobs, nobody was hiring and those who were, got minimum 30% lower salaries. Competition in my field was 400 to one. Not only did a candidate need to be better than 400 applicants, they had to be willing to accept below market wages. Needless to say, the first job I got out of college was not related to my degree but, to 5 years of industry experience and my salary offer was, "this is what we are paying. If you don't want it, we can hire someone else for less. That wage got me on IBR for $129/mo. I paid more than the minimum but, still accrued interest faster. I was lucky to have $15 left at the end of the month, after rent, utilities car payments AND getting my groceeies from a food bank. This system is not sustainable and, if people want to talk about passing the burden on to taxpayers, that would be to the borrower, who has to pay income tax on money they never earned, while the private lender gets a tax credit on the principal. The problem is with the lenders expecting double the interest they used to offer and needlessly skyrocketing tuition and college expenses BECAUSE the U.S. GOVERNMENT stopped providing subsidies to the public Universities and to offset the loss, passed what taxpayers were already paying, onto the students, who are already taxpayers (sheesh)... Then add the price gauging private colleges, who took government loans and made false promises and yes, now the government is paying off those loans to private corporations on behalf of the jipped students.Add in that all colleges have lowered entrance standards, to make the bucks off of people who have no business being in college. I've considered going back to school and found that most colleges accept low C and high D averages. Those kids drop out when the loans run dry. I wanted to find a school that takes education seriously, with a minimum entry requirement of a low B or high C and that doesn't exist. You can basically fail high school and be accepted into college. It's a sad waste of time, money and it detracts from the people who actually go to learn something.
It's 15%. 5% of whatever he's earning doesn't account for the poverty line... I say whatever he's earning because I can't read the damn article. If he can afford to pay the loan, he should.
>>Any balance remaining after 25 years is forgiven, effectively covered by taxpayers.
This looks like a very serious flaw in the repayment clause on the very face of it.
To think that people are doing multiple jobs waiting tables, working minimum wage and surviving on tips are paying taxes to subsidize this sort of education is bonkers.
The government should first exhaust all recovery chances(going after the home, assets etc) and then think of the next steps.
The amount of self-righteousness in this thread is amazing. Seriously, who cares how much money he currently makes? He's making bank, fuck him, right?
People, the point of a student loan is to finance an education, not to create wage-slaves or have we forgotten that part? But I guess that ship has sailed if random internet people are for the interests of predatory financial institutions. Such a shame..
> Wage slavery is a term used to draw an analogy between slavery and wage labor by focusing on similarities between owning and renting a person. It is usually used to refer to a situation where a person's livelihood depends on wages or a salary, especially when the dependence is total and immediate.[1][2]
Does it mention anything about a limit or a salary or something? If you make 200k+ a year, sole provider for a family, pay a mortgage in a high COL, depend on your job for your healthcare and you're left with little to no disposable income, what does that make you relative to your job?
The problem with all of this is that you have a ton of disposable income when you make this much money and live in Utah, even with student loans this large. Unless you are a dummy with money. C.f. the dude's enormous, expensive house, which, yes, is optional.
Or better yet, check out a blow by blow of what he does on a weekly basis - http://www.pictame.com/user/hukesnow/358561263/1408325250713... It ain't working to pay off his loans. In fact it looks like he and his friends and family are on a permanent vacation.
Guess what? I make good bank. I sure as shit don't live like this B/C it's effing expensive. I don't even have kids or debt. I know it's a foreign concept here in the US - but it's called living within or even beneath your means - particularly if you have any debt. I agree totally with you that student loans should finance an education and I too am against predatory financial institutions. What I'm disgusted by is people whining about the huge (supposedly educational) debt that they refuse to pay down while galavanting all over the world. Ease up on the multitude of pricey hobbies (and fine - call yourself a professional with sponsors - but if you are a million in debt - what you have is an expensive HOBBY), work some extra hours at your practice, and stop neglecting your wife and kids. In other words, be a man and start working on your debt.
There were mentions on this thread about him being sponsored for all his trips and equipment but whatever.
> I care about how extravagantly he lives
> It ain't working to pay off his loans
> I make good bank. I sure as shit don't live like this B/C it's effing expensive. I don't even have kids or debt.
> What I'm disgusted by is people whining about the huge (supposedly educational) debt that they refuse to pay down while galavanting all over the world
> be a man and start working on your debt. (Oh man, this is hilarious. Is this what constitutes being a man these days?)
All of the above are definitely not foreign concepts in the US. It's called self-righteousness (as I mentioned in my very popular initial post above) and it built this country. Millions of plebs getting fucked by the corporate machine while others hold the moral ground to 'pay your debt and be a man!'. It's an amazingly efficient system because you have plebs self-governing by social pressure instead of spending more money (and providing negative value for the shareholder) on enforcement. This is why people hang themselves when they're in debt.
I know it's an unpopular opinion but I personally root for the guy. Good for him, he should not pay shit. If this is his way of fighting the system so be it. It reminds of me of a plot from Weeds [1]. If I were him I would spend and enjoy all of my hard won money (like any first world person in a civilized country should be able to do) and shrug at the creditors.
Fuck student loans [2], fuck cash hoarding universities and last but not least, fuck the BAPCPA.
> In other words, be a man and start working on your debt.
This also reminds me how much of a man Bezos was when he got a huge tax bill from Texas for failing to collect sales tax for 15 years...
He downsized his business, put projects and investments on hold and budgeted for paying off his debt. Oh wait, no, he didn't do any of that. I guess he's whatever the opposite of a man is considered to be.
Where did the money go? To the academic establishment (USC in this case): tenured professors, deans/administrators, etc. Where did the money come from? The US taxpayer.
The whole rotten system is a thinly-veiled massive government subsidy to the higher education industry. In addition there's a weird incentive structure for students where you either minimize loans to a reasonable amount (increasingly difficult), or you go all-in and borrow such an extraordinary amount that is impossible to pay off in any reasonable time. Then in 20 years, it's all "forgiven" and the US government covers the balance. There is no way for this to be sustainable in the long term.
I don't think that Mike Meru has anything to complain about. Professional schools have been this way for a long time --- you borrow a lot of money to go and then make a good salary which let's you pay it back. It looks to me like it worked out for him. There are prople who borrow money to attend a program on the basis of misleading information from the school. But it doesn't look like that happened here.
That he lets his debt balloon instead of paying it down with his $225K/year salary is on him. It seems like he's betting on some loan forgiveness program coming along to bail him out. Meanwhile, he lives in a $1,000,000 house and drives a Mercedes.
I'm a little confused about what his average interest rate is, but if you assume .0725 (or .11) then the following math holds: if he had choosen a ten year repayment plan after he graduated then his payment would have been $7k/month or $85k/year (under 11%: $8.3k/m $99k/yr). $85k/year is roughly $120k in gross pay. What do you think his starting salary was as a dentist? I bet at least $120k and probably closer to $150k or more. That means that if his wife had a job paying roughly $50k, then they could have afforded a frugal, but comfortable lifestyle for the ten years to pay back the loans then gone nuts. (Under the 11%: his gross pay would have been $140k which would have hurt a bit).
I'm not sure if I'm being clear here, but my point is if he made $150k and his wife made $50k, then their household income would be $200k. Subtract out the $120k gross pay equivalent of his loans and you have a household income of $80k. There are lots of families in Salt Lake City that survive on half that much.
But the guy got a $390/month loan for a Benz while in school... That's nuts. I suspect the big mistake the guy made, and I may be wrong here, was becoming an orthodontist. It sounds like becoming an orthodontist added 50% more to his debt but I doubt it increased his salary 50% over being a dentist.
So I love numbers as much as the next person and look forward to reviewing all of these responses in detail - particularly as they pertain to interest rates, inflation and so on. HOWEVER, has ANYONE looked at this guy's instagram and Facebook accounts? It's ez to find him under his full name. After perusing these accounts in which he surfs, skis, snowboards, hikes and climbs ALL OVER THE WORLD - I ALSO came across this gem of a bio for him as listed in Dental Economics: Principles of Practice Management: "Mike is also a recognizable face outside of dentistry in that he is a sponsored big mountain snowboarder (splitboarder) that travels the world climbing mountains while documenting his travels. During the past two seasons, he pioneered and summited multiple first descents in remote ranges in the US. When he’s not serving SPEA, practicing Orthodontics, or Splitboarding, he spends time with his wife Melissa and two Daughters, Elle and Emme."
So. . . without going into ANY calculations - lifestyle is INSANE. No frugality in this household. No wonder his wife tries not to think about things. Perhaps, and this is a bold idea, he consider lowering his lifestyle a bit. As an athlete myself, these hobbies ARE EXPENSIVE!!!!!
I wonder at which point he gave up on paying back the loan. I think they were reasonably frugal for the first four years (the $400/mo MB being an exception). It seems like when they started the orthodontics school they considered entering this, and definitely by the time they bought the house, they had no intention of repaying the student loans.
HE WON A 6 MILLION DOLLAR LOTTERY. 10K+ loan payment lowered to 1.6K a month. So the government pays him 8K+ TAX FREE MONTHLY ANNUITY SUBSIDY FOR THE NEXT 25 YEARS. I'm too upset to do the exact math but 6M is a ball park once you figure in the payments and taxes he is not paying on this government subsidy.
HE WON A 6 MILLION DOLLAR LOTTERY. 10K+ loan payment lowered to 1.6K a month. So the government pays him 8K+ TAX FREE MONTHLY ANNUITY SUBSIDY FOR THE NEXT 25 YEARS. I'm too upset to do the exact math but 6M is a ball park once you figure in the payments and taxes he is not paying on this government subsidy.
Do you need a loan to pay off your bills or buy a home?* Do you need a loan to start up a business? Make your dreams come through by contacting Good news loan FINANCE, we give out loan with an interest rate of 3% if interested, contact us with the stated email below:
goodnewsloancompany7@gmail.com
Your names:
Amount Needed:
country:
Loan Duration:
Phone Number:
87 comments
[ 1.4 ms ] story [ 175 ms ] threadCry me a river, you're making bank, bud.
The last major age generation (the ones who are in their 50's to 60's) pulled the ladder up on us millenials. Ive heard the stories that college education in the '60s and '70s were affordable to the point that a summer job would cover 100% of the expenses. Instead, I ended up in $30k in debt.
The debt is a fact of life. And so is the likelihood that social security will not be there when/if I retire. The age keeps moving up and up, which is a form of generational theft.
Next time, try depersonalizing these types of articles. The problem of higher ed debt is a scary $1 trillion behemoth with no end in sight. When that bubble bursts, we all should worry.
You aren't wrong, but this article is worse.
We chose a private lender specifically because at the time (early 2000s) private loans were dischargeable in bankruptcy and we wanted a hedge against the possibility that she might fail in her career. We accepted a significantly higher interest rate for that reason alone. They changed the law and now they're not dischargeable.
Luckily, TERI itself filed for bankruptcy and didn't keep good records. They'd sold the loans but the records showing assignment to the new entity apparently don't exist. We stopped paying on them, they filed suit, and we demanded that they prove ownership of the debt. They withdrew the suit, and the statute of limitations has since expired.
I think this guy is a grifter just taking advantage of a system that rewards grifters. Sheesh, I wish I could afford EXTREME sports.
This person does not have a debt problem. They have a spending problem.
[1]: https://www.zillow.com/homes/for_sale/Draper-UT/pmf,pf_pt/69...
Here is a milion dollar detached home in that area: https://www.zillow.com/homedetails/934-E-Crosswind-Way-Drape...
As far as crying a river goes, I wonder what that's done to his credit rating... Seems like it would be in the toilet from debt to income ratio.
Factor to multiply cost is 2.2 =(1.09^9)
Figure it was increasing at a steady state so you could split the difference. Even if he had looked at salaries originally, then backed in to the price using normal (not education) inflation, he would have dramatically underestimated his exit cost.
(Edit: I'll note that it's just like the WSJ to pick the least sympathetic possible face of a real social problem that probably ought to see some government action to fix.)
Dental school is expensive, I get it. He wouldn't have to be here if he made some better financial decisions though.
In the end it's going to be the taxpayers taking the hit, however - apparently he's part of a program that will forgive the debt in 25 years.
The purpose of a student loan is to finance an education, not to enslave a person trying to better themselves and lock up all their income just to satisfy greedy banks.
One of my coworkers (younger fellow, 28-29 or something) has a six digit loan and pays 700-something a month, which is around 20% of what he most likely makes. He doesn't have any kids though, so he can afford to overpay like that, for now.
student loans are a shark industry in america, idc what anybody says. Preying on the people in society attempting to be the most productive, it's awful. That the guy in tfa has a medium-to-high income shouldn't really matter. The student loan should be a tool of utility for the learner, not a tool of profit maximization for the bank.
There comes a point when you don't need to spend all your cash . Someone making 225k can pay back a far greater % than someone making 100k can. Live within your means, pay back the money you owe in a few years, and then you will be far ahead. He has simply chosen not to do that.
And then you are a victim.
In 8 years, if everything goes according to plan, her loans will be forgiven and be near $600,000. It’d be a lot more cost effective for society to just offer free med school and lower doctors’ wages. But our society has opted for inefficiency. Her large doctor salary is necessary to pay for her schooling but when the loans are paid off her salary won’t decline.
Basically only deferral or taking the extended 30 year plan don't count.
He'll pay "10% of his discretionary income, defined as adjusted gross income minus 150% of the poverty level. Any balance remaining after 25 years is forgiven, effectively covered by taxpayers. The forgiven amount is then taxed as ordinary income."
Don't get me wrong, dental school is stupid expensive (forecast from USC was ~450k) but this guy has the financial acumen of a brick. You don't buy a new house, Tesla, and take vacations to Havana with that much debt, while simultaneously pushing the burden for your schooling onto everyone else.
https://www.fullwsj.com/articles/mike-meru-has-1-million-in-...
Sounds like he's doing the smart thing at this point, doesn't it? He borrowed over $600,000. By the end of the 25 year period he'll likely have paid back less than the original principal.
"Since refinancing his debt with the federal government in 2015, lowering the rate to 7.25%, Mr. Meru’s balance has grown by $148,948. It will keep growing through the 25-year life of the repayment plan until it reaches $2 million. That sum will be forgiven and, at current tax rates, could cost Mr. Meru more than $700,000 in income tax payments.
By then, Mr. Meru will have paid $1.6 million. That would be about the same as repaying his $600,000 in student loans at a rate of 4% over 25 years, said Jason Delisle, a student-loan expert with the American Enterprise Institute, a conservative think tank. The biggest factor in Mr. Meru’s runaway debt, he said, was a high principal combined with long periods when Mr. Meru made no payments."
> lowering the rate to 7.25%
> repaying his $600,000 in student loans at a rate of 4%
These two things don't jive. Did he have the option of a loan at 4% at some point?
This looks like a very serious flaw in the repayment clause on the very face of it.
To think that people are doing multiple jobs waiting tables, working minimum wage and surviving on tips are paying taxes to subsidize this sort of education is bonkers.
The government should first exhaust all recovery chances(going after the home, assets etc) and then think of the next steps.
People, the point of a student loan is to finance an education, not to create wage-slaves or have we forgotten that part? But I guess that ship has sailed if random internet people are for the interests of predatory financial institutions. Such a shame..
Does it mention anything about a limit or a salary or something? If you make 200k+ a year, sole provider for a family, pay a mortgage in a high COL, depend on your job for your healthcare and you're left with little to no disposable income, what does that make you relative to your job?
Or better yet, check out a blow by blow of what he does on a weekly basis - http://www.pictame.com/user/hukesnow/358561263/1408325250713... It ain't working to pay off his loans. In fact it looks like he and his friends and family are on a permanent vacation.
Guess what? I make good bank. I sure as shit don't live like this B/C it's effing expensive. I don't even have kids or debt. I know it's a foreign concept here in the US - but it's called living within or even beneath your means - particularly if you have any debt. I agree totally with you that student loans should finance an education and I too am against predatory financial institutions. What I'm disgusted by is people whining about the huge (supposedly educational) debt that they refuse to pay down while galavanting all over the world. Ease up on the multitude of pricey hobbies (and fine - call yourself a professional with sponsors - but if you are a million in debt - what you have is an expensive HOBBY), work some extra hours at your practice, and stop neglecting your wife and kids. In other words, be a man and start working on your debt.
> I care about how extravagantly he lives
> It ain't working to pay off his loans
> I make good bank. I sure as shit don't live like this B/C it's effing expensive. I don't even have kids or debt.
> What I'm disgusted by is people whining about the huge (supposedly educational) debt that they refuse to pay down while galavanting all over the world
> be a man and start working on your debt. (Oh man, this is hilarious. Is this what constitutes being a man these days?)
All of the above are definitely not foreign concepts in the US. It's called self-righteousness (as I mentioned in my very popular initial post above) and it built this country. Millions of plebs getting fucked by the corporate machine while others hold the moral ground to 'pay your debt and be a man!'. It's an amazingly efficient system because you have plebs self-governing by social pressure instead of spending more money (and providing negative value for the shareholder) on enforcement. This is why people hang themselves when they're in debt.
I know it's an unpopular opinion but I personally root for the guy. Good for him, he should not pay shit. If this is his way of fighting the system so be it. It reminds of me of a plot from Weeds [1]. If I were him I would spend and enjoy all of my hard won money (like any first world person in a civilized country should be able to do) and shrug at the creditors.
Fuck student loans [2], fuck cash hoarding universities and last but not least, fuck the BAPCPA.
[1]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_UqAo5A6-TQ
[2]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PE66HEZBZYE
This also reminds me how much of a man Bezos was when he got a huge tax bill from Texas for failing to collect sales tax for 15 years...
He downsized his business, put projects and investments on hold and budgeted for paying off his debt. Oh wait, no, he didn't do any of that. I guess he's whatever the opposite of a man is considered to be.
The whole rotten system is a thinly-veiled massive government subsidy to the higher education industry. In addition there's a weird incentive structure for students where you either minimize loans to a reasonable amount (increasingly difficult), or you go all-in and borrow such an extraordinary amount that is impossible to pay off in any reasonable time. Then in 20 years, it's all "forgiven" and the US government covers the balance. There is no way for this to be sustainable in the long term.
That he lets his debt balloon instead of paying it down with his $225K/year salary is on him. It seems like he's betting on some loan forgiveness program coming along to bail him out. Meanwhile, he lives in a $1,000,000 house and drives a Mercedes.
I'm not sure if I'm being clear here, but my point is if he made $150k and his wife made $50k, then their household income would be $200k. Subtract out the $120k gross pay equivalent of his loans and you have a household income of $80k. There are lots of families in Salt Lake City that survive on half that much.
But the guy got a $390/month loan for a Benz while in school... That's nuts. I suspect the big mistake the guy made, and I may be wrong here, was becoming an orthodontist. It sounds like becoming an orthodontist added 50% more to his debt but I doubt it increased his salary 50% over being a dentist.
For added fun, check out his insta: https://www.instagram.com/hukesnow/?hl=en
So. . . without going into ANY calculations - lifestyle is INSANE. No frugality in this household. No wonder his wife tries not to think about things. Perhaps, and this is a bold idea, he consider lowering his lifestyle a bit. As an athlete myself, these hobbies ARE EXPENSIVE!!!!!
SHAMEFUL!
Sounds like he's making out like a bandit.
goodnewsloancompany7@gmail.com
Your names: Amount Needed: country: Loan Duration: Phone Number:
E-mail: goodnewsloancompany7@gmail.com