New
York
Times...
Degrees
of
Debt
A
Generation Hobbled by the Soaring Cost of College
By Andrew
Marting and Andrew W. Lehren
Published:
May 12, 2012
Photographs
by Ruth Fremson/The New York Times and Ty William Wright for The New
York Times
Taking
on
debt has become a central part of the college experience for many
students.
ADA,
Ohio —
Kelsey Griffith graduates on Sunday from Ohio Northern University. To
start
paying off her $120,000 in student debt, she is already working two
restaurant
jobs and will soon give up her apartment here to live with her parents.
Her
mother, who co-signed on the loans, is taking out a life insurance
policy on
her daughter.
“If
anything ever happened, God forbid, that is my debt also,” said Ms.
Griffith’s
mother, Marlene Griffith.
Ms.
Griffith, 23, wouldn’t seem a perfect financial fit for a college that
costs
nearly $50,000 a year. Her father, a paramedic, and mother, a preschool
teacher, have modest incomes, and she has four sisters. But when she
visited
Ohio Northern, she was won over by faculty and admissions staff members
who
urge students to pursue their dreams rather than obsess on the sticker
price.
“As
an
18-year-old, it sounded like a good fit to me, and the school really
sold it,”
said Ms. Griffith, a marketing major. “I knew a private school would
cost a lot
of money. But when I graduate, I’m going to owe like $900 a month. No
one told
me that.”
With
more
than $1 trillion in student loans outstanding in this country,
crippling debt
is no longer confined to dropouts from for-profit colleges or graduate
students
who owe on many years of education, some of the overextended debtors in
years
past. Now nearly everyone pursuing a bachelor’s degree is borrowing. As
prices
soar, a college degree statistically remains a good lifetime
investment, but it
often comes with an unprecedented financial burden.
Ninety-four
percent of students who earn a bachelor’s degree borrow to pay for
higher
education — up from 45 percent in 1993, according to an analysis by The
New
York Times of the latest data from the Department of Education. This
includes
loans from the federal government, private lenders and relatives.
For
all
borrowers, the average debt in 2011 was $23,300, with 10 percent owing
more
than $54,000 and 3 percent more than $100,000, the Federal Reserve Bank
of New
York reports. Average debt for bachelor degree graduates who took out
loans
ranges from under $10,000 at elite schools like Princeton and Williams
College,
which have plenty of wealthy students and enormous endowments, to
nearly
$50,000 at some private colleges with less affluent students and less
financial
aid.
Here
at
Ohio Northern, recent graduates with bachelor’s degrees are among the
most
indebted of any college in the country, and statewide, graduates of
Ohio’s more
than 200 colleges and universities carry some of the highest average
debt in
the country, according to data reported by the colleges and compiled by
an
educational advocacy group. The current balance of federal student
loans nationwide
is $902 billion, with an additional $140 billion or so in private
student
loans.
“If
one is
not thinking about where this is headed over the next two or three
years, you
are just completely missing the warning signs,” said Rajeev V. Date,
deputy
director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, the federal
watchdog
created after the financial crisis.
Mr.
Date
likened excessive student borrowing to risky mortgages. And as with the
housing
bubble before the economic collapse, the extraordinary growth in
student loans
has caught many by surprise. But its roots are in fact deep, and the
cast of
contributing characters — including college marketing officers, state
lawmakers
wielding a budget ax and wide-eyed students and families — has been
enabled by
a basic economic dynamic: an insatiable demand for a college education,
at
almost any price, and plenty of easy-to-secure loans, primarily from
the
federal government.
The
roots
of the borrowing binge date to the 1980s, when tuition for four-year
colleges
began to rise faster than family incomes. In the 1990s, for-profit
colleges
boomed by spending heavily on marketing and recruiting. Despite some
ethical
lapses and fraud, enrollment more than doubled in the last decade and
Wall
Street swooned over the stocks. Roughly 11 percent of college students
now
attend for-profit colleges, and they receive about a quarter of federal
student
loans and grants.
In
the last
decade, even as enrollment at state colleges and universities has
grown, some states
have cut spending for higher education and many others have not
allocated
enough money to keep pace with the growing student body. That trend has
accelerated as state budgets have shrunk because of the recent
financial crisis
and the unpopularity of tax increases.
Nationally,
state and local spending per college student, adjusted for inflation,
reached a
25-year low this year, jeopardizing the long-held conviction that
state-subsidized higher education is an affordable steppingstone for
the lower
and middle classes. All the while, the cost of tuition and fees has
continued
to increase faster than the rate of inflation, faster even than medical
spending. If the trends continue through 2016, the average cost of a
public
college will have more than doubled in just 15 years, according to the
Department of Education.
Much
like
the mortgage brokers who promised pain-free borrowing to homeowners
just a few
years back, many colleges don’t offer warnings about student debt in
the glossy
brochures and pitch letters mailed to prospective students. Instead,
reading
from the same handbook as for-profit colleges, they urge students not
to worry
about the costs. That’s because most students don’t pay full price.
Even
discounted, the price is beyond the means of many. Yet too often,
students and
their parents listen without question.
“I
readily
admit it,” said E. Gordon Gee, the president of Ohio State University,
who has
also served as president of Vanderbilt and Brown, among others. “I
didn’t think
a lot about costs. I do not think we have given significant thought to
the
impact of college costs on families.”
This
series examines the implications of soaring college costs and the
indebtedness
of students and their families.
Read
the
complete article at the New York Times
|