Abstract. Reviewing the data regarding effects of student debt on students' financial outcomes following college -whether successful graduation or premature exit -makes clear that there is a price to pay for having to borrow money to go to college. Indebted college graduates have lower net worth, less home equity, and compromised ability to accumulate assets, as compared to their peers with the same level of education but no student debt. They may also experience poorer educational outcomes, with independent effects on earning power and, then, later wealth accumulation. Especially given the relationship between initial household wealth and children's later educational outcomes, these findings about the post-college financial outcomes of indebted students and graduates raise the specter of ongoing, sustained, and cross-generational perpetuation of societal divides. In the United States, higher education is valued not just as a good in itself, but also as a means to the end of greater economic security and the primary lever for economic mobility. Evaluating student loans through this lens underscores the long-term, volatile, and often hidden effects of student loan dependence and raises the stakes for consideration of alternative approaches to higher education finance.
This survey of 957 Latino immigrant adults in urban and suburban communities in the greater Kansas City metropolitan area explores the migration experiences, employment contexts, family structures, and integration processes of an emerging and rapidly growing immigrant population.The study is an example of community-driven research, conducted by a nonprofit community development and immigrant rights organization in close partnership with local immigrant leaders.
ollege costs are high and continue to grow as American students and their families are borrowing at unprecedented rates to keep pace with the increasing costs. The College Board (2012a), which produces an annual report tracking college costs, estimates the total annual cost of college attendance plus room and board at a private four-year college rose by 4.2 percent in 2012-13 to $29,056 (College Board, 2012a). Even the traditionally more affordable in-state, public four-year college costs were $8,655 for the 2012-13 school year, an increase of 4.8 percent from the prior school year. While these figures may reflect Postsecondary education costs in the United States today are rising with an increasing shift from societal responsibility to individual burden, thereby driving greater student borrowing. Evidence suggests that (i) such student debt may have undesirable educational effects and potentially jeopardize household balance sheets and (ii) student loans may better support educational attainment and economic mobility if accompanied by other, non-repayable financial awards. However, given declines in need-based aid and falling state support for postsecondary costs, policymakers and parents alike have failed to produce a compelling complement to debt-dependent financial aid that is capable of improving outcomes and forestalling assumption of ever-increasing student debt for a majority of U.S. households. This article, which relies on longitudinal data from the Educational Longitudinal Study, finds parental college savings may be an important protective factor in reducing debt assumption. However, several other factors increase the likelihood students will borrow: perceiving financial aid as necessary for college attendance, expecting to borrow to finance higher education, having moderate income, and attending a for-profit college. After controlling for student and school variables, the authors find that parental college savings increase a student's chance of accumulating lower debt (less than $2,000) compared with students lacking such savings. Policy innovations to increase parental college savingssuch as children's savings accounts-could be an important piece of the response to the student debt problem in the United States. (JEL I2, I22, I24)
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