With the cost of education rising, more students seem to prefer education loans. But, many are finding themselves without jobs, even after paying for expensive education.
According to recent reports, the total education loan dues in the banking system had risen from Rs 48,382 crore to Rs 72,336 crore, a rise of 49.5 per cent, between March 2013 and December 2016. In comparison, non-performing assets in this segment was up 142 per cent, from Rs 2,615 crore to Rs 6,336 crore in the same period. Clearly, more and more students are finding it difficult to service loans.
What is interesting is that the number of students heading abroad for higher education has been rising consistently. For example: Data from EducationUSA — a US Department of State network of international students advising centres in over 170 countries — show the number of students from India registered the highest growth in the past two years, increasing 24.9 per cent in 2015-16. In terms of number of students, India is second only to China, with the latter having 328,547 student compared to the former’s 165,918.
Obviously, many parents would be over-leveraging themselves in the hope that their children would get jobs with fat salaries — something that hasn’t been happening for some time. And, given the Trump administration’s focus on enhancing job prospects of US citizens, things could continue to remain bad for more time. Even in India, job growth hasn’t been happening at exponential rates to accommodate the influx of new entrants.
“The slowdown in information technology has meant this industry, a major recruiter of engineers, is hiring far fewer people than it used to. Low capex and credit growth figures indicate corporates are not expanding capacity. Job creation in manufacturing has also been below expectations. Also, engineeand MBAs graduating from lower-rung colleges are finding it difficult to get well-paying jobs, and hence the defaults,” says S G Raja Sekharan, who teaches wealth management at Bengaluru’s Christ University.
Interestingly, defaults are happening even in small-ticket loans of below Rs 7.5 lakh where no collateral is required, or less than Rs 4 lakh, where a guarantor is not a prerequisite. Ajay Bohora, co-founder, managing director and chief executive officer (CEO) of HDFC Credila Financial Services, points to the operational difficulties before lendein keeping track of borrowers. “Frequent changes of addresses occur within a short span, when a student moves from one location to another for a bachelor course, then changes city or even country for a Mastedegree, and again for a job. All these changes take place within two-six years. This makes tracking of students extremely challenging,” he says.
Overstretching to fund foreign courses: Studying abroad can take a heavy toll on a family’s finances. “An engineering course can each year cost you $35,000-60,000 (Rs 22.5-38.6 lakh) in the US or $40,000-50,000 (Rs 20.36-25.45 lakh) in Canada. This is just the tuition fee. Add another $10,000-12,000 (Rs 6.4-7.7 lakh) for accommodation, food and other expenses,” says Neeraj Khanna, co-founder and director, Spark Career Mentors, a Bengaluru-based education consultancy.

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