Canada Student Loans impoverishes the future

ANTIGONISH (CUP) — There's something seriously wrong with a country that allows its future — its students — to begin their adult lives weighed down by a mortgage-like debt.

Earlier this year, I received a student loan balance update informing me that in my quest for higher education, I have so far accumulated $30,000 in debt to my province and country. Upon graduation, I will be expected to pay about $400 a month — a sum that has been set for me, regardless of my state of employment.

Graduates are rarely able to pay these loans back in a timely manner. They are often shackled with tens of thousands of dollars in debt up to 10 years after graduation, when many are also trying to build families and save for their futures.

The Canada Student Loans Program has been taking advantage of naïve, newly graduated high-school students by allowing them to withdraw upwards of $10,000 a year, without any introduction to financial management or a promotion of alternatives.

A 2007 study conducted by the Coalition for Student Loan Fairness, a group that advocates Student Loans reform, states: “Even people with mortgages or car loans rarely encounter the problems that graduates experience with the administration of student loan debt.”

This same study found that CSLP loans are financed at prime plus five per cent, translating to anywhere from 8.5 to 11 per cent interest rates. This is more than double what it costs the government to borrow the money. And struggling graduates are being forced to pay higher interest rates than they would on a new car or even their mortgage.

Meanwhile, CSLP is annually turning a profit on their debt repayment program. The federal government expected the program to produce a $550-million surplus in 2007.

A study conducted by Winston Jackson, a former professor at St. Francis Xavier University in Nova Scotia, said student loans were just the beginning of an individual's financial problems.

Jackson found that graduates who took out loans in university make nearly 20 per cent less in terms of annual income than those who went through school loan-free.

Unfortunately, many students feel that they have no other option but to take out loans.

Had I realized just how much money $30,000 was, or how long I would be paying it back, when I applied for a student loan, I might have reconsidered my options. I might have researched other forms of financial support, thought about attending school part-time, found higher paying summer or year-long jobs, or tried for more scholarships.

While Canada Student Loans imagines itself as a saviour to those who could not otherwise afford an education, reality is it's a for-profit agency more than prepared to saddle those same young students with debts that will follow them long into their adult lives.

In an age when the value of post-secondary education is so high that you almost can't get a job without graduating university, the government must be taking steps to ensure that Canada's future generations aren't being forced to live under the poverty line because of their degrees. Education should be increasing potential, not holding people back.

Editorial opinions or comments expressed in this online edition of Interrobang newspaper reflect the views of the writer and are not those of the Interrobang or the Fanshawe Student Union. The Interrobang is published weekly by the Fanshawe Student Union at 1001 Fanshawe College Blvd., P.O. Box 7005, London, Ontario, N5Y 5R6 and distributed through the Fanshawe College community. Letters to the editor are welcome. All letters are subject to editing and should be emailed. All letters must be accompanied by contact information. Letters can also be submitted online by clicking here.