demeus wrote:
I think you have to qualify for Social Security to get the student loans dismissed and that is hard to do. Used to be, you could use a hardship clause under the BK code but that was just as hard (a secretary at a US BK court told me that in her 30 year career, she only heard of 2 cases where that happened) and I think Congress closed that loophole in 2005.
No. It's still in place.
The problem is that courts have ruled that hardship = "utter hopelessness" and even then they aren't inclined to grant it.
I keep hoping they will reverse this nonsense in bankruptcy law.
Until then, I keep any savings off the grid. I don't have anything of real value in my name, and I document all of my efforts to find a "good job" (largely every application/resume I've sent out and any response I've gotten).
In the USA, there are two repayment plans (ICR/IBR) that "forgive" what's not paid off after 25 years. It becomes taxable income, but the IRS (currently) uses a form to determine your tax liability based on your current income/assets. So, if you're dirt-poor, you might not owe anything.
If nothing changes, I might file for bankruptcy 5 years from this date and argue that the tax liability is a de facto hardship. Case law supporting this position has already happened where the court granted a discharge of student loans.
Hopefully the student loan bubble pops before I get to that point.