Why in the world would you take on that much debt for a $100k/yr job? Best I can tell, the better state colleges in many (most?) places are about $25k/yr all-in. So your debt at graduation should be no more than ~$100k.
-couple reasons:
--spend a few minutes looking for any job on Indeed.com or any of the sites that pay any type of reasonable actual wage (~$100K or higher) and they'll require more than just a generic degree, most will require graduate level coursework
--that tuition figure is bare minimum, once you factor in room & board, books, a meal plan, campus parking pass, etc., you end up close to $40K / yr. I think Harvard and MIT are something like $80K/yr all in now, or higher. Colleges love to nickel and dime their students
--there is very little you can actually do with a standard four year degree. Most of my friends had to go and get an MBA, JD, or some kind of masters to have a shot at a six figure salary.. and for some fields, like psychology, medicine, etc., are going to require tons of grad school. And guys, I know "six figures" sounds like a lot of money, but it's not at all, maybe single living in the middle of nowhere, but if you live where the actual jobs and people are, and then you combine that with hoping to afford your own kids, etc., the money goes fast. Many big cities require that you earn upwards of $200K/yr to be able to afford a typical house in that region
--there is zero incentive to keep the cost of education down since they'll give anybody a student loan, for any amount, because a student loan is never forgiven, not through even death or bankruptcy, so the bank is guaranteed their money back one way or another
--back to your earlier point though, even graduating with a "small" $100K debt is absurd... imagine you're 22 and you already have $100K in debt to your name. That state school engineering job will land you $50K/yr... or about $750/wk after taxes. Most urban areas you will pay at least $2K/mo in rent.. so almost 3 of your paychecks are going to go just to paying that off... the struggle is real folks. Also, people no longer get a pension, and chances are we'll never retire either. Less than half of salaried jobs offer a 401K program, and about half of the ones that do offer a match
My apologies and condolences. Its a miracle you can still function at all the unbelievable burden you've had to bare.
almost sounds like the kind of complaining a millennial would do, right?
works harder than anyone I've ever known
For sure. The hardest working people I know are 25-35 age group. They'll work a "real" 9-5 as a chemist in a lab somewhere then go wait on tables at night, all while working through a graduate program
The millennial trashing get's old, the economists have proven it out, for the first time in US history people are now making less than their parents, and will continue to do so, all while piling on more and more debt. Mind you, I know plenty of people 50+ who don't know how to change a flat tire, and many new cars today don't even come with a spare. Our BMW came with run flats and a "repair kit" (just goop you squirt in the tire) but no actual spare