DozenRoses wrote:johnnyvann840 wrote:PMONSTER wrote:
I have been hearing this a lot. Can this concept be explained to me. I was always taught to repay debt ASAP. I don't have a credit card but does the same thinking apply to credit cards?
Well, if he makes the minimum payment at that relatively low rate, he will be forgiven nearly one third of the entire debt in ten years. You aren't getting that deal from any bank or individual... only Uncle Sam. You take it and don't think about it. Why pay it off now? Save that money and invest it every month in something else, or buy more house (you can afford a larger mortgage payment if you make the min) , which is sure to be worth more in ten years.
If he is forgiven , say $14k.. he essentially got that $50k interest free over all that time.
This is what I was thinking. However, I am risking that this program stays in place (gotta put faith in Uncle Sam!), AND that I keep a job in this same field for the next 10 years.
This isn't accurate. If you amortize a 50K debt at 5.5% and have $300/month payments - it will take around 26 or so years to pay off. After 10 years you would have cut down about 10,000 in principle and paid roughly 26,000 in interest. You will be forgiven $40,000 in 10 years which will likely result in a $40,000 bump in your income in the year you exercise that option. Whatever the $40,000 bump does to your marginal tax rate is what you're going to owe in taxes - let's say $11,200 in additional taxes at a 28% marginal tax rate.
I can all but guarantee you that the Gov't (or any other lender) isn't going to take your payments and apply them all to principle as part of this debt forgiveness program. They're going to split each payment between principle and interest with the bulk of your interest to be paid in the early part of the loan as that is when you have the greatest amount of principle outstanding.
Now, if the Gov't won't 1099 you at the exercising of this option, then by all means pay the minimum. That will make it, in essence, an interest free loan. You will have paid $36,000 for $50,000 "worth" of education.
You have all the other concerns down. Do you have to work with this Organization for 10 years? That's a long time. Is there a minimum amount of time you must be there to qualify? What are your future plans? etc, etc, etc...