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Features » May 18, 2006

Hey Millennials, Debt Becomes You

Twenty-somethings face a life of looming loans

By Mischa Gaus

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The children of baby boomers are the new debtor class. Buckling under a heavy weight of debt, new workers step into an economy of low-wage and contingent work, a combination that makes the basics of adulthood increasingly unattainable.

“We grew up in the Regan era where everything was fake, voodoo economics, and we’re not seeing the connections,” says Anya Kamenetz, author of Generation Debt: Why Now Is a Terrible Time to be Young. “I don’t think we can continue treating people as disposable, not providing them with health care or the means to save.”

Educational debt is the most visible—but not the only—barrier to the well-being of the “millennial generation,” roughly defined as Americans born after 1978. Every gate on the way to middle-class life is now tougher to unlock. Mortgages, health insurance expenses, car maintenance, child care and tax loads for two-income families have all ballooned.

The accumulating stress on this generation is spilling over—not yet into the street, as it did in France in late March, but into some emerging forms of collective action.

Owing ‘til you’re old and gray

The familiar combination of summer work, a part-time job during the school year and a little help from home doesn’t begin to cover today’s college costs. To afford one year at a public university, about $11,000, students earning minimum wage would have to work full-time year-round.

“Students are in a pretty deep financial hole,” says Luke Swarthout, higher education associate for the State PIRGs, which advocate on a variety of consumer, environmental and good-government issues. The Federal Reserve says graduates now shoulder three times more debt than a decade ago, after adjusting for inflation. Undergraduates now average almost $20,000 in debt, with a quarter taking on more than $25,000, according to Robert Shireman, director of the Project on Student Debt, a Berkeley-based think tank.

“They end up still paying off their loans about the time when they’re figuring out how to help with their own children’s education,” Shireman says. Some never emerge from their chasm of liabilities. The Supreme Court recently decided that retirees’ Social Security checks can be garnished for old student debts, and changes to bankruptcy law last year make it nearly impossible to discharge educational loans.

For students who approach their working lives seeking returns beyond pure remuneration, rising debt loads postpone basic decisions. Pam Morus, 29, spends about 10 percent of her income every month keeping up with $35,000 in student loans. A music therapist in Chicago, she received no grants during her five-year program at Eastern Michigan University. She’d like to purchase a home and start a family soon, but unless she finds a partner who brings in significantly more income, it is impossible. “I barely make enough money to pay my rent,” she says.

Even with a scholarship to American University’s law school, Julia Graff, 28, started her career as a staff attorney at the Delaware ACLU last year facing $80,000 in debt. She anticipates paying lenders until she retires.

Graff knew her ambition to pursue a nonprofit career meant she would forgo luxuries. But her debt-to-income ratio means trips to university dental clinics and taking on odd jobs like tutoring and translating Spanish.

“I live paycheck to paycheck,” Graff says. “Eventually I’m not going to want to live like I did when I was 18.”

And when lives don’t match up with debt schedules, the strain can be severe. After finishing community college, Mandy Minor, 30, bounced around the University of South Florida before settling on business administration. She graduated five years ago, picking up $60,000 in consumer and student debt along with her diploma.

Minor owns a small writing and design firm with her husband, and had a daughter five months ago. She pays $400 a month just to maintain her debt load, and has given up on buying a house. She worries how to provide health insurance once her daughter no longer qualifies for Florida’s state-provided care.

“It bothers me on a fundamental level that we even have to worry a little about how our daughter will receive medical care,” she says. “It sickens me, and I know I’m not alone.”

Minor says some of her credit-card bills predate her college years. “I think sending high school students offers of credit should be illegal,” she says.

Taken together, such individual struggles illuminate the consequences of punitive political decisions. After all, student debt is intimately linked to government actions, like Congress’ decision to boost interest rates to 6.8 percent for undergraduate Stafford loans, both new and old.

Ensuring economic security is not solely an issue of self-interest for young people. Because higher education remains the most important factor for predicting economic success—and thus an opportunity to bridge inequality—it is a social justice concern as well.

Last year, Yale students held a sit-in to demand financial aid reform. Within a week, they won a pledge from the university that families making less than $45,000 would no longer pay tuition. Yale was just catching up: The Ivies have embarked on a game of financial-aid chicken, fighting to see who can boost higher the amount families can earn before footing college costs. Currently, that figure stands at $50,000 at the University of Pennsylvania and $60,000 at Harvard.

Struggling for a living wage

Once they’ve graduated, however, what really staggers young people is a one-two punch: saddled with loans, students have a hard time finding a stable job that will actually support them. Steady productivity gains have been swallowed by capital, stagnating wages for young people. A Federal Reserve survey says the median net worth of households under 35 rose just 1.3 percent in the last decade after inflation.

“Management has pulled a fast one,” says Kamenetz. “They’ve gotten people to accept intangible benefits instead of old, actual benefits. We’ve all sort of followed this idea that we’re all free agents.” Flexibility and contingent labor have replaced the certainty of bargaining agreements and pensions.

And contrary to media narratives about consumers run amok, foolish spending is not the root of most families’ financial problems, writes Harvard Law professor Elizabeth Warren in her book, The Two-Income Trap: Why Middle-Class Mothers and Fathers Are Going Broke. Credit card bills are higher now, but consumer spending between this generation and the last balances out—for instance, as more is spent on airline tickets, less is spent on tobacco.

So where do young people turn to confront their economic plight? They are channeling some energy into workplace organizing. Retail workers at Borders and Starbucks have employed minority unionism, which initially doesn’t seek contracts or bargaining units but builds a base of power through action by less than half the workers. Workers across the country trade information about corporate policies online, coordinating efforts between stores and sniping at overpaid executives.

The underlying model is nothing new: Unions like United Farm Workers have used it for decades. But it could fit young people in hard-to-organize retail work, says Kate Bronfenbrenner, director of labor education research at Cornell University.

“Young people don’t feel as vulnerable as older workers because they’re not going to be in this job forever,” she says. “They are more willing to take risks.”

Minority unionism could challenge giant chain stores, she says, if unions commit to long campaigns and follow a social-unionism approach that brings the community behind the drive. The storybook example is the L.A. Justice for Janitors Campaign, which in the early ’90s saw the flowering of a community-union partnership that placed moral concerns alongside economic ones. However, these are difficult, expensive campaigns in high-turnover jobs exceed the reach of any sympathetic union local. Critics see minority unionism as a half-cocked attempt to engage young workers.

“We had industrial unions when we had industrial manufacturing. Now we have a new way of working that is much more short-term and mobile,” says Sara Horowitz, president of Working Today, a New York-based advocacy group that provides insurance and other benefits for contingent—and often young—laborers. “Unions have evolved since the days of Moses and Exodus, and there’s no reason to think they’re not going to evolve again.”

Working Today counts 16,000 contingent workers in its ranks. Although its benefits are limited to workers in New York, it lobbies nationally to fill gaps like health care and retirement savings for the 30 percent of the workforce it estimates work independently.

Millennials are also warming to another old tactic for addressing their grievances. They are increasingly appearing at the polls, with half of voters under 30 turning out in 2004, their largest showing in 14 years. Sustaining this interest, though, would require reversing a long-standing trend: Youth voting rates have been declining since 1972.

The emerging generation’s beliefs could offer an opportunity for reshaping the political discourse. Recent studies by the liberal New Politics Institute and a University of Maryland public policy center suggest millennials are more likely to identify as progressive than any other age group.

But unless they find political avenues to channel their discontent, they may soon find themselves screaming in the streets like their French counterparts.

“They have different lives than their parents did, a different set of economic opportunities,” Horowitz says. “It’s time for them to talk about what they need.”

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Mischa Gaus is an editor of Labor Notes magazine, the largest independent union publication in the United States.

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  • Reader Comments

    I have no pity for most recent graduates of our higher ed system (I’m one of them, 2 years out).  Most people major in “Literature,” “History,” pol. science or underwater basket weaving and expect, no DEMAND to find real jobs!  You know, when I went to school my life was pretty dull because I majored in Bioinformatics, a very challenging and demanding field with much to learn from computer science & biology.  I now have a very good job, amazing!  A skill that can be applied!  I didn’t waste mommy & daddy’s money getting a degree in something un-employable, partying with the frats and becoming a professional protestor.  I know all these things are part of the “college experience” but I was more interested in my future “rest of life” experience.

    Moral of the story: I can afford to pay my student loans and do not demand more of the government.  You know, college is simply not for everybody.  It is an economic risk, on a case-by-case basis people have to decide whether it is really worth it for them if they don’t think they will be employable.  Some people are better off learning a trade, carpentry, plumbing, electrical, mechanic whatever - all of these fields turn a very nice buck and these things are always in demand.

    Posted by Hyjinx22 on May 17, 2006 at 2:08 PM

    Unions are unfortunately not a long-term solution either.  Just look at how the union has utterly destroyed GM with obligations it simply doesn’t have the financial capacity to meet.  Or the airlines for that matter.  Cradle-to-grave French-like job security and benefits is an insanity, people need to make sure they get paid what they’re worth in the now and do their own long-term planning and investing.  Unions that over-reach as they inevitably do destroy the very buisnesses that employ them, the greed of the moment offsets the futures of others to come.

    Posted by Hyjinx22 on May 17, 2006 at 2:13 PM

    “they may soon find themselves screaming in the streets like their French counterparts.”

    Who are these counterparts? Are we referring to the crazy Algerian/French youths that burned 100’s of cars in France? With the ignition being the French govt attempting to make rules that made it easier to hire - and fire if necessary - young workers?

    “A Federal Reserve survey says the median net worth of households under 35 rose just 1.3 percent in the last decade after inflation.”

    Doesn’t this mean that the under 35 crowd is actually better off now than a decade ago?

    “She graduated five years ago, picking up $60,000 in consumer and student debt along with her diploma.”

    So a couple of years of community college and two years of USF (my old school!) and she owes $60K!?!  Certainly we should provide more help in financial planning for people who obviously lack the basic skills! (What an awful poster child for this article!)

    Hey, why don’t we start with something sensible? Perhaps we could reduce tuition for in state public universities via more federal aid (rather than cutting taxes, which preferentially helps those who don’t need the help?!? We might also wonder if the goal should be *everyone* going to college, when many would benefit from technical schools (plumbers and other techies make good $$$s). But no matter what we do. i doubt that unskilled workers are going to be making $100K/yr salaries, as they did in the “old days”. So we are all going to have to learn to live with that. . .

    Also, the idea that each generation will be “better off” (read even more consumptive) than the last is a bad one. We all need to live with less. With increased efficiency, this does not have to be painful, but either way, the addition to ever expanding material wealth is just going to have to end (and no, this does not apply to the very rich, they will NOT feel our “pain”).

    Posted by wolf on May 17, 2006 at 2:33 PM

    I participated in this article knowing full well that many readers would blame me for my debt problem and perhaps even attack me personally.  “wolf,” thank you for taking on that charming role.  It is easy to judge others when we do not know their circumstances, is it not?

    The child of a single mother left penniless after a nasty divorce, I had to pay for my own education.  To complete school in a reasonable amount of time I chose not to work but a very little had to finance my education with loans.  That meant I also had to use credit cards for necessities - and for helping my household, which included my dying grandmother.  So yes, I graduated with debt.  The reasons for that debt are legitimate, and it shows your lack of ability to consider all the possibilities to assume the debt was a result of wild partying or shopping sprees.

    I did not choose “underwater basket weaving” as my major, but rather the soulless but supposedly useful Business Administration - Marketing track.  The average salary of people with my education and experience in Tampa is about $35,000 - not very much when you have a baby to support and a lot of debt to repay.

    “wolf,” I do not lack financial planning skills as you so judgmentally suggest, as I am currently running a small business and managing to pay all my bills on a small salary.  You clearly suffer from the mentality of someone who has never needed - truly needed - anything.  You may think an inflation-adjusted household income growth of 1.3% is good, but compared to the dramatic rises in cost of living it’s nothing.  I mean, look at the rise in medical costs over the last ten years; it’s like 100% or something incredible!  So costs go up, salaries stay flat, but I’m the bad guy for being in debt.  What else would you have me do?  Live in my car?  Stop eating?  Go bankrupt?

    “We all need to live with less.”  True.  As I am doing.  But the debt isn’t going anywhere, and I want to plan for my child’s future.  Why can’t our state education be free as it is in many other countries?  Then I could be a contributing member of my local economy instead of paying student loans.

    Posted by mandyminor on May 18, 2006 at 6:32 PM

    mandyminor - hey we agree that education should be cheaper or even free! So we agree on an important issue.

    Funny story. I too was a child of a nasty divorce. I too had to work my way through college (physics in my case). I worked part time (SAGA food service, it it still there?) and lived very inexpensively. Still i graduated with some debt (about $2K). This was a while ago, back in 1982. Still USF holds fond memories for me. Of course, i had no dying grandmother to help (but i did help my destitute mom, mostly with my labor but also a small amount of money).

    Doesn’t inflation adjusted growth mean “real” growth? As in adjusting for the cost of living?

    I wish you and your family nothing but good fortune.  As the media have pointed out, we are a nation of debtors (both public and private). I think this does not have to be so, perhaps i am mistaken.

    If i attacked you personally, i apologize. No personal attack was intended.

    Posted by wolf on May 18, 2006 at 7:11 PM
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Appeared in the May 2006 Issue
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