Where Facts And Controversy In The News Come Together In Truth

Wednesday, May 16, 2012

WV College Student Debt Is The Opposite Of National Trend

Analysis Shows State Run Schools Leave Graduates With Greater Levels Of Debt…Not True In The Mountain State

According to a new Reuters study, public state run colleges cause more student debt than private run 4 year schools. But, according to statistics for WV colleges, it’s the students who graduate from privately run schools that are the ones leaving with more in student debt.

Why the variance between WV and other states? One reason for this appears to be how other colleges across the nation are restructuring their financial aid policies and utilizing large endowments. Just how creative are they becoming with the high rate of student debt? Seventy-four schools nationwide, both public and private have eliminated loans from their financial aid packages for at least some students, according to FinAid.org.

For instance, Harvard, Stanford and Berkeley have capped contributions for students from low- and middle-income families. Starting next fall Harvard students with a family income of less than $65,000 will pay nothing to attend, and those with incomes under $150,000 will pay 10 percent of the total cost of tuition, room, board and fees - or less. Adam Falk, president of Williams College said that whenever its possible, provides students who qualify for financial aid with grants or scholarships rather than loans. "Our commitment is not to make education free, but to make it affordable,"

Where you attend college now can significantly impact how much you owe when you leave school. For example, obtaining an Ivy League degree often requires less borrowing than a degree from many much less expensive state schools. 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. In fact, about two-thirds of bachelor’s degree recipients borrow money to attend college, either from the government or private lenders, according to a Department of Education survey of 2007-8 graduates; the total number of borrowers is most likely higher since the survey does not track borrowing from family members.

To demonstrate these differences, Reuters gathered research on the average student debt for the class of 2011 - the most recent data available, at 25 private and public universities and liberal arts colleges with top rankings from U.S. News and World Report's annual survey. (Linked below) These schools, among the most elite and expensive in the country, also have instituted in the last several years some of the most generous financial aid policies. On average, 53 percent of students at the surveyed schools received financial aid, and at least half of students at most of the institutions graduated debt-free.

In one example, University of Michigan graduates owed, on average, more than $27,000, compared with an average for Princeton University graduate of only $5,000. And the much higher debt levels at Michigan come even though costs there for in-state students are less than half the cost of attending Princeton - an estimated $25,204 for incoming freshman at Michigan for tuition, room and board, compared with $54,780 at Princeton.

Students at no-loan colleges still can, and often do, borrow money to help cover the portion of costs that the institutions determine should be borne by their families. At Pomona College, for instance, the average student debt is slightly more than $10,000 and 53 percent of students graduated with loans. The University of North Carolina, on the other hand, also had one of the lowest debt burdens, $15,472, with 65 percent of students graduating debt-free.

Financial support for West Virginia public colleges and universities comes directly from the state government, from tax dollars and other revenue the state collects in lieu of private endowments. West Virginia public colleges and universities may also receive funds from the federal government and private sources, but in many cases the state is the primary source of support of public colleges. According to stats, 73% of all 4-year graduates’ leave WV colleges owing an average of $23,678.

Eliminating loans isn't an option at most public universities. Substantial state funding cuts are forcing public schools to depend more heavily on tuition payments to cover operating costs. "We just don't have the fiscal means to eliminate debt," says Susan Fischer, financial aid director at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, where students graduated with an average debt of $24,140 in 2011. Two-thirds of all students in 2010 borrowed money to pay for college, for an average debt load of $25,000, according to the nonprofit Institute for College Access & Success.

According to the nonprofit College Board, one reason the average tuition and fees at private four-year colleges rose 28 percent in the last five years is that the increase was 41 percent for in-state tuition at public schools. California alone, which educates about 10 percent of all full-time U.S. college students, increased tuition and fees at state schools by 21 percent in 2011 at its four-year institutions and by 37 percent at two-year colleges.

Financial support for West Virginia public colleges and universities comes directly from the state government, from tax dollars and other revenue the state collects in lieu of private endowments. West Virginia public colleges and universities may also receive funds from the federal government and private sources, but in many cases the state is the primary source of support of public colleges.

With the weak job market, the prospects for paying back loans are challenging for recent grads. One statistic grabbing headlines is that total outstanding student loan debt in the U.S. now tops $1 trillion, exceeding even credit card debt. One yardstick for how much debt students can handle: Borrow no more over four years than what you'll earn the first year out of college. That can require rigorous budgeting and tough decisions, yet college administrators believe loans help make students feel more responsibility for their education.

Take away from the Reuters' survey, some debt is nearly unavoidable in higher education today. Despite the generosity of elite schools, today's student debt burden will undoubtedly impact graduates' and perhaps the nation's future opportunities. "We're talking about the generation who will hopefully steady our economy," says Ronald Johnson, financial aid director at UCLA, where students graduated with average debt of $18,203 in 2011. "And we've tied one hand behind their back as we send them off into the world.

End Of Story

Jack Swint-Publisher
West Virginia News
E-Mail:  WestVirginiaNews@gmail.com
Website: http://WVNewsOnline.com
Blog: http://WestVirginiaNews.blogspot.com
Twitter:  @WVNewsOnline
LinkedIn: Jack Swint

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