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Will The Student Loan Bubble Burst Be The Next Financial Crisis? |

Will the student loan bubble burst be the next financial crisis? |

Will The Student Loan Bubble Burst Be The Next Financial Crisis? |

Will the student loan bubble burst be the next financial crisis? |

For college graduates, it’s not the degree they’ve earned that defines them, it’s the debt they accumulated along the way. Nationally reaching a ceiling of $1.4 trillion, the student loan bubble is about to burst.

Beyond inflation, the rising costs of a college education is astronomical, leaving millions of people with no choice but to take on loans. Between 2006 and 2016, the overall cost of college rose 63%, student housing shot up 51%, and textbook prices increased an incredible 88%. The average recent college graduate owes around $28,000, with many of them having to defer their loans from typical 10 year payoff plans when meeting deadlines becomes increasingly impossible.

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So what does life after debt look like? For millennials it means frugal spending, strict prioritizing, and a possible lifelong commitment of student loan repayment. Over 80% of young people who have yet to purchase a home cite their student loan bubble as the cause. Average monthly payments for loans come out to be nearly $400, putting a huge cramp in savings potential for millennials. This new reality means that it takes about 12 years for a college graduate to save up enough money for a down payment on a home – and those are just the lucky ones.

Looking back on previous economic strife in the United States, a stagnating economy is perhaps one of the first signs of national financial crises. Saddled with crippling debt and the degree to show for it, millennials are spending less on fun and more on simple survival. Living with a simple hierarchy of needs, college grads are allocating their finds towards necessities; 47% of Americans are putting off buying a car and even one in seven are waiting to get married. Far from a prolonged adolescence, as some earlier generations would call it, millennials are making tough decisions for themselves and eventually it will begin affecting the economy as a whole.

It’ll take more than just paying off the debt on an individual level. As young millennials and Gen Zers continue graduating college, we move closer to an impending crisis build from a nation of debt. To overcome this, it will take some serious reform, a good hard look at education, its costs, and eliminating predatory lending tactics for education. Detailed in this infographic is more on the student loan bubble crisis, where it will lead us in the future, and how we can stop it before it’s too late.

The post Will The Student Loan Bubble Burst Be The Next Financial Crisis? appeared first on ValueWalk.

Published at Sat, 12 Jan 2019 12:18:51 +0000

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One Week Into SegWit, Hardware Wallets Lead the Pack in Slow-But-Sure Roll Out

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After a years-long development process and even more debate and political struggle, Segregated Witness finally activated on the bitcoin network last week. The protocol upgrade introduced a number of benefits which can enable more advanced second-layer protocols. It also offers a block size limit increase for wallets that utilize the new feature, meaning users can enjoy lower fees and faster confirmation times.

One week in, Segregated Witness has been implemented in several wallets, though overall adoption is off to a bit of a slow start. While many wallets and services indicated prior to the activation that they would be ready for the upgrade, many are taking a bit of a conservative approach when it comes to main-net release, while others have since faced unrelated difficulties that demanded their attention.

So far, hardware wallets are among the first to have jumped on the new opportunity. Both Trezor and Ledger have fully implemented and enabled Segregated Witness. This is not very surprising: Hardware wallets stand to benefit from SegWit more than most wallets, as it helps to significantly speedup the signing process.

“But we mostly implemented Segregated Witness to help the network first,” Ledger CTO Nicolas Bacca told bitcoin Magazine. “The more Segregated Witness transactions are used, the more space there is for everybody. In a way we’re also doing our part to disarm the 2x part of the SegWit2x hard fork.”

Another hardware wallet provider, Digital Bitbox, also implemented Segregated Witness in its firmware, cofounder and bitcoin Core contributor Jonas Schnelli told bitcoin Magazine, but it still requires a compatible desktop app to utilize the feature. This is a work in progress.

Full node wallets like bitcoin Core are also in the process of implementing Segregated Witness. But bitcoin Core developers decided to not include the feature straight away in order to avoid edge-case attacks that become harder to execute as time passes. bitcoin Core will instead release a new version of the software, 0.15.1; this could take another month or two before it’s available.

As for regular wallets, it seems that Blockstream’s GreenAddress could well be the first to offer the feature.

“It’s days away,” GreenAddress developer Lawrence Nahum told bitcoin Magazine. “We were ready a while back; however, during testing we found that fees were a bit higher in one of our wallets. That’s because some software libraries available now weren’t available when we implemented SegWit. At this point it’s mostly a matter of more testing.”

Most other wallets are also in various stages of implementing the feature, but for various reasons haven’t gotten to the point of release quite yet. In some cases, like BitGo and BTC.com, this had to do with the prioritization of integrating bitcoin Cash into their service; the new cryptocurrency launched unexpectedly only a couple of weeks ago. Similarly, Mycelium told bitcoin Magazine it has been implementing new features which diverted some time and attention away from SegWit.

Other popular wallets, including Bitcoin Wallet (also known as Schildbach’s bitcoin Wallet), Breadwallet, Electrum, mSIGNA, as well as webwallet Xapo confirmed that they are implementing SegWit, and all told bitcoin Magazine that they expect this should be available soon — though none gave a specific timeframe for it.

The post One Week Into SegWit, Hardware Wallets Lead the Pack in Slow-But-Sure Roll Out appeared first on Bitcoin Magazine.