Title: Young Physician Indebtedness
1Young Physician Indebtedness
2Debt is a fact of life
- 87 of med students graduate with debt
- Average debt (2008)
- 143,140 for public schools
- 173,304 for private schools
- 154,607 overall
- Med students can borrow federal subsidized,
unsubsidized, and Grad PLUS loans - Can also borrow private loans
Source AAMC
3How Debt Affects You
- Your credit score
- Installment loan with fixed payment
- Can help build credit history
- Monthly payments
- A student with average debt would have a monthly
payment of 1,780 on standard plan, 1,073 on
extended plan - If you dont pay the interest during a 3-year
residency, monthly payments are more like
1,307-2,167 - Will affect your ability to get credit (DTI)
- Will delay/reduce your ability to save and invest
- One more thing to keep track of
4The Cost of Interest
- At graduation 154,607 in debt
- 3-year residency 33,733 in interest
- Now you owe 188,340
- 5-year residency 60,218 in interest
- Now you owe 214,825
- 7-year residency 90,427 in interest
- Now you owe 245,034
5Residency
- You do not have to repay your federal loans
during residency. You can put them into
forbearance. - Interest will continue to accrue
- Must refile for forbearance every 12 months
- If you do not pay the interest, your debt will
grow - If you are graduating this year, you MAY be able
to get one year of economic hardship deferment.
Check your lenders website.
6Residency
- Mean PGY-1 stipend 45,659
- less taxes (State/Federal, FICA) 11,279
- Annual take home pay 34,380
- Monthly take home pay 2,865
- From your monthly take-home pay, also deduct
things like health insurance, parking,
retirement savings, and other items that might
come out of your paycheck. - After you save a little and pay for
rent/mortgage, utilities, car costs, food,
clothes, etc will you have enough left over to
pay 876 in interest each month?
7So what? Im going to be rich.
- Not so fast.
- Lets say you make 200,000 post-residency
- 10,370/month after taxes (federal, state, FICA)
- 2,167 student loan payment
- 500,000 mortgage 3,600/month (including
taxes insurance) 500 for utilities - 35,000 car 675/month, plus taxes insurance!
- Left about 3200/month
- Now think about health insurance, practice
costs, malpractice insurance, conferences,
spouse, kids, other housing costs, clothes, gas,
food, vacations, gifts, etc - Retirement (15), emergency savings (3-6 months),
investments all things you have to start
thinking about right away if you actually want to
be rich.
Sources http//www.paycheckcity.com/NetPayCalc/n
etpaycalculator.asp, nytimes.com, bankrate.com
8Okay, yes, debt is a problem.So what can I do?
- You CAN Minimize debt while in school
- Make a budget and stick to it
- Write It Down (or Type It Up).
- Track expenses monthly, at least until being
frugal is a habit - Enlist help in sticking to your budget friends,
family, significant others - Be upfront youre going to give cheap gifts
- Meal co-ops, finding deals, cheap entertainment
9What you can do Minimize debt
- Do NOT borrow the maximum
- Compare your budget to the Cost of Attendance
- Use YOUR budget to determine exactly how much you
need to borrow - Dont borrow more Once you have it, youll spend
it - If you have any extra, reduce your loans
- Borrow the good stuff (subsidized) before the
less-good stuff (unsubsidized, Grad PLUS, or
private loans)
10What you can do Minimize debt
- Get help.
- If your parents can help, accept it.
- If youre not sure if they can help, ask.
- 200/month can save you 20,000.
- Steal (toilet paper) from your family.
- Ask your financial aid counselor for help with
budgeting and finding scholarships. - Talk with a financially savvy family member, or a
financial planner.
11What you can do Minimize debt
- Find outside scholarships instead of taking out
loans. - Talk to your financial aid office
- Use Google!
- Marian J. Wettrick Charitable Foundation for
female graduates of a Pennsylvania college
attending a Pennsylvania medical school - Norfolk Foundation norfolkfoundation.org
- Soros pdsoros.org
- Organizations you or your parents belong to
12What you can do Minimize debt
- Find creative ways to supplement your income and
lower your expenses. - Work part-time
- Pick up change
- Go to happy hour at Chilis
- Go to your schools free entertainment
- Get student discounts! Ask everywhere.
- Join Sams Club with your roommate
- Cancel cable, use your schools free internet
- Take advantage of family and friends
- Clip coupons
13What you can do Dont take on debt
- Two government programs will pay for your entire
medical education - Military
- www.goarmy.com/amedd
- www.airforce.com/opportunities/healthcare/educatio
n - www.navy.com/healthcareopportunities
- National Health Service Corps
- nhsc.bhpr.hrsa.gov/applications/index.asp
14What you can do Avoid more debt
- Once you have a salary
- Allow for short-term/emergency savings off the
top. Pay yourself first and budget whats left
to avoid more debt! - Pay down consumer debt and other financial
obligations that have the highest interest first.
- Keep living cheaply and dont take on any other
debt (like a car payment or credit cards)
15What you can do Save anyway
- Save first (even in residency), budget whats
left. - Take advantage of time save young.
- Save 100/month from age 30-60 149,000
- You only put away 36,000 total.
- Save 100/month from age 40-60 59,000
- Even though you only put away 12,000 less!
- Find a way to trick yourself into saving
- Deposit savings automatically
- Save your change The electronic way round all
of your transactions up in your checkbook
register, put leftover into savings - Save what you get from coupons
16What you can do Take advantage of residency
- Use deferment if you can (economic hardship,
fellowship) - Start paying, if you can, to earn incentives
- OR, use the forbearance so you have no required
payment, then pay as much as possible - Try to stick to your student budget, while youre
used to living like a student - Get a roommate. Youre never home anyway.
- Max out your 401(k) or 403(b) to the extent
possible for long term savings at least get any
employer match
17What you can do Take advantage of residency
- Use IRA options that you wont have later.
18What you can do Take advantage of residency
- The student loan interest you pay is tax
deductible, but might not be later. - Other higher education tax benefits (particularly
in Med 4) IRS Publication 970
19What you can do Take advantage of residency
- Income-Based Repayment
- You pay 15 of the amount that your income
exceeds the poverty line - For many students, this payment will not even
cover accrued interest - Accrued interest on subsidized loans that is not
covered by the IBR payment will be covered by
Dept. of Ed. (for up to 3 years) - Unpaid interest does not capitalize
- If you pay under IBR for 25 years, any remaining
balance is forgiven
Source AAMC
20Income-Based Repayment
- Example
- Average resident salary 45,659
- 2009 Poverty line for single person 10,830
- 150 of poverty line 16,245
- Payment equal to 15 of income that exceeds 150
of poverty line, so - 45,659 minus 16,245 29,414
- 29,414 x 15 4,412
- 368/month
Source AAMC
21Income-Based Repayment
- Your IBR payment may not even cover the accruing
interest. - If you owe 34,000 subsidized and 68,000
unsubsidized, you are accruing 578 of interest
each month - Interest accrued on subsidized loans that is not
paid by the IBR payment will be covered by the
Department of Education - In the above example, 1/3 of your loans are
subsidized, so 1/3 of your payment (123) will go
to the sub loan - The sub loan is accruing 193 of interest each
month, so the Department will cover 70
Source AAMC
22What you can do Get someone else to pay your
loans
- Service commitment programs following graduation
or residency - Pay down loans in exchange for service
- Some offer tax incentives
- Programs currently available through
- Various states
- Public Health Service
- NHSC
- The Armed Forces
- NIH
- AAMCs website lists many programs
- www.aamc.org/stloan
23What you can do Direct Loan Forgiveness
- If you have Direct Loans, or consolidate with
Direct Loans, and work in public service for 10
years while paying your loans using IBR, you may
have the remaining balance on your loans
forgiven. - Examples of public service non-profit medical
schools and teaching hospitals, government jobs,
active duty military, public health, public
safety, emergency management - This is only a good option if you already planned
to work in a low-paying public service job.
Source AAMC
24What you can do Adjust your attitude
- Beware of keeping up with the Joneses
- Beware of being overly optimistic
- Think of yourself as poor, not rich
- Being frugal is the new being green
- Be realistic about needs vs. wants
- Establish a waiting period
25What you can do Get organized
- Be organized and have a plan
- Keep a file with all of your loan info
- Know your rights and responsibilities
- Know your loan repayment options
- Lost? Ask your financial aid office, and check
- www.nslds.ed.gov
- Keep good records of contact with your lender
- Never lose touch update your address
26What you can do Keep living cheap after
residency
- If you bring home 10,000/month, and can continue
to live on 3000/month - You could pay off the average debt in 2 years
- You could pay off 250,000 in 3.5 years
- If you bring home 10,000/month, and can live on
5,000/month - You could pay off the average debt in 3 years
- You could pay off 250,000 in 5 years
27What you can doGood real-world budgeting
- 3-6 months of living expenses emergency fund
- Short-term savings the Life happens fund
- This should include your non-monthly budget items
- Retirement try to save 15 of your income
- Long-term savings/investments
- Debt ratios - Housing no more than 28, total
debt no more than 36 - Eliminate debt asap
- Two methods highest-rate first, or snowball
28What Not To Do
- Do not borrow more than absolutely necessary
- Do not start living on next years salary
- Do not take out life insurance to cover your
federal student loans - Do not repay student loans at the expense of
savings you must do both! - Do not enter repayment if youre not sure you can
make the payments - Do not assume your financial planner knows
anything about student loans - Do not ignore the problem
29More Help
- Your schools financial aid office
- Financial planners
- Your residency hospital
- Online resources
- Medical Economics (online magazine)
- AAMC MD2 and FIRST
- CNN Money, MSN Money, etc
30More help
- Me!
- Margaret Baxton
- Assistant Director of Financial Aid
- University of Virginia School of Medicine
- med7Q_at_virginia.edu
- (434) 924-8413