Five facts about student loans

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Provides a new perspective on the entire student loan situation. Might find some of the info surprising, I did.


Five facts about student loans
Kadija Yilla and David WesselTuesday, November 12, 2019

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Kadija Yilla
Senior Research Assistant - Hutchins Center on Fiscal & Monetary Policy, The Brookings Institution

David Wessel
Director - The Hutchins Center on Fiscal and Monetary Policy
Senior Fellow - Economic Studies


Americans owe about $1.5 trillion on their student loans–more than they owe on their credit cards. The increase in total student debt, stories of families struggling with six-figure loans, and the response of politicians to anxiety about student debt among young voters have turned student debt into a high-profile issue. To inform that conversation, here are five facts about student loans drawn from an event – Student loans: A look at the evidence – hosted by the Hutchins Center on Fiscal and Monetary Policy at Brookings.

1. SIX PERCENT OF BORROWERS OWE A THIRD OF ALL THE OUTSTANDING DEBT.

A very small fraction of all student loan borrowers have very large loans. Six percent of borrowers owe more than $100,000 in debt, with 2 percent owing more than $200,000. This 6 percent owes one-third of the outstanding $1.5 trillion of debt. At the other extreme, 18 percent of borrowers owe less than $5,000 in student loan debt. They collectively owe 1 percent of the debt outstanding.

Share of borrowers and share of debt by outstanding borrower debt balance


2. ABOUT ONE QUARTER OF STUDENT LOAN BORROWERS, WHO HAVE ABOUT HALF THE DEBT OUTSTANDING, BORROWED FOR GRADUATE SCHOOL.

Out of all households with student debt, only 26 percent are headed by an individual with a graduate degree. While only a small share of households with student debt have a graduate degree, loans associated with graduate degrees account for 50 percent of the total outstanding student loan debt. In contrast, 42 percent of households with student debt are headed by someone without a bachelor’s degree; they only account for ¼ of the total outstanding debt.

Share of borrowers and share of total outstanding debt by educational attainment


3. INDIVIDUALS WHO OWE THE MOST ARE NOT THE INDIVIDUALS WHO DEFAULT ON DEBT.

Borrowers with graduate degrees have the lowest default rates despite accounting for about half of all student debt. Higher default rates are more common for students who went to for-profit institutions. Forty percent of borrowers from for-profit two-year programs default on their loans within five years of entering repayment, and 32 percent of those who went to for-profit four-year programs defaulted in this same time frame. Among students who went to public community colleges, about 25 percent default within five years of entering repayment. Defaults are much less frequent among those who borrowed to go to public or private non-profit four-year schools.

Five year default rate by institution


4. MOST BACHELOR’S DEGREE RECIPIENTS GRADUATE WITH LITTLE TO NO DEBT.

Thirty percent of all bachelor’s degree recipients graduate with no debt, and another 23 percent graduate with less than $20,000 in loans. Fewer than 20 percent of all borrowers owed more than $40,000. Among for-profit schools, nearly half of all borrowers owed more than $40,000, but only 12 percent of those who attended four-year public colleges owed the same amount.

Cumulative debt of bachelor's degree recipients, 2011-12


5. EVEN IF FINANCIAL AID COVERS THE WHOLE TUITION BILL, MANY STUDENTS STILL BORROW TO COVER LIVING COSTS.

Many students borrow to not only cover their tuition and fees but also to get cash to finance the cost of living while they are in school. An Urban Institute analysis conducted using the National Postsecondary Student Aid Study finds that student borrowing patterns among those for whom all tuition is covered by scholarships and grants (no net tuition) are similar to those who have to pay tuition. For students at public universities and colleges with no net tuition, 22 percent borrow $30,000 or more; on average, they borrow $24,000. In comparison, 23 percent of those who pay average net tuition of more than $5,000 borrowed $30,000 or more; on average, they borrow $28,000.

Debt held by borrowers, by net tuition level
 
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It doesn't surprise me the the student loan issue is less severe than it usually get advertised as. Not trying to come down on anyone with a lot of debt but I'm sure there's plenty of students who worked for scholarships or qualified for pell grants to help ease the burden a bit, and that's without taking parents into the equation (although a pell student obviously wouldn't have parents paying for their college). There's also the military and, possibly, corporate reimbursement programs.
 
If its not that severe then it should be no problem for the government to erase it.
That makes no sense, if it can be and is being reasonably paid back the government has less incentive to get rid of it. That's not even considering private loans.
 
i love how they minimize like "oh, only 6 percent of people owe more than 100k"

like owing 80k isn't a big deal, nonissue, look elsewhere, higher education isnt a scam, no siree
 
What are the 6% who owe >100k studying? Seems like they are mostly in graduate school. 100k is not an abnormal amount of debt for a medical student, for example. They take on that debt to make more money later.
It was news to me that you can take out loans for for-profit colleges. That seems like it was always going to end badly.
 
Credit score is a meme, you're a millennial, you will never own a house anyway. If you're too deep in debt just do as this homeless cretin says.

 
The real story about student loans is that Boomers need to accumulate a shit-ton of financial assets because they're getting old and about to retire, which means that the cost of borrowing gets driven down in order to make the market clear, which then drives up the prices of debt-financed assets (housing, education). Students have to be in significant amounts of debt today so that when Boomers are retired they can spend the student loan repayments 30 year-old professionals can finally afford to pay off.
 
The real story about student loans is that Boomers need to accumulate a shit-ton of financial assets because they're getting old and about to retire, which means that the cost of borrowing gets driven down in order to make the market clear, which then drives up the prices of debt-financed assets (housing, education). Students have to be in significant amounts of debt today so that when Boomers are retired they can spend the student loan repayments 30 year-old professionals can finally afford to pay off.
The real story about student loans is that universities need to fire all the diversity and inclusion administrators and stop justifying their ridiculous salaries whilst taking gov't money so that students can afford tuition without having to take out exorbitant loans.
 
Main issue is too many pointless degrees, thus hard to get a job to pay it back.

In the UK it works differently, if we use the SLC we don't have to pay it back until we earn £18,935 or £25,000 if you got it after 2012, and after 30 years tge the debt is wiped off, so really not an issue here even with our left wing politician trying to make it one.
 
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