Paying Back, Not Giving Back: Student Debt's Negative Impact on Public Service Career Opportunities
4/1/2006
Executive Summary
American colleges and universities
play a pivotal role in training the nation’s citizens, leaders, innovators,
public servants and educators. In today’s economy, a college education
is more desirable than ever before – millions of high school students strive
for its promise and the benefits it brings for both the individual and society.
In the past decade, government
support for higher education has declined; as a result, tuition and fees have
increased. Grants have failed to keep pace. As costs continue to swell, students
are taking on more and more debt to pay for their degrees. Two-thirds of all
four-year college graduates in 2004 left school with student debt, compared
with less than one-third in 1993.
Recent graduates, especially
those with low and moderate incomes, must spend the vast majority of their salaries
on necessities such as rent, health care, and food. For borrowers struggling
to cover basic costs, student loan repayment can create a significant and measurable
impact on their lives. This report focuses on such “burdensome” or
“unmanageable” debt. Last fall, two economists, Sandy Baum and Saul
Schwarz, published a report proposing a new graduated benchmark system for estimating
burdensome student debt. They posit that recent graduates with very low salaries—about
half of the median individual income in the U.S.—cannot manageably repay
their student loan debt while meeting their other needs. Graduates with incomes
above this minimum threshold can manageably pay no more than a certain percentage
of their income on their student loan debt. Their formula takes into account
the fact that recent graduates with low incomes experience financial constraints
at lower debt levels than their higher earning peers.
This report looks at the
issue of unmanageable debt as it pertains to college graduates entering two
critical public service careers: teaching and social work. Given increasing
dependence on student loans, borrowers graduating from four-year schools and
working in these two public service careers often carry more debt than they
can manage. The prospect of burdensome debt likely deters skilled and dedicated
college graduates from entering and staying in important careers educating our
nation’s children and helping the country’s most vulnerable populations.
In order to demonstrate
the impact of student loan debt on public servants, we looked at average starting
salaries of teachers and social workers nationally and by state and estimated
what percentage of these new public servants would carry unmanageable student
loan debt. “Unmanageable” means that their loan payments would have
a measurable and burdensome impact on their lives and would likely hinder their
ability to pay for basic necessities.
Factoring in high debt levels,
the congressional fixed 6.8% interest rate for federal student loans, and low
starting salaries, we found that 23% of public four-year college students graduate
with too much debt to manageably repay their loans as a starting teacher. Thirty-seven
percent (37%) of public four-year college graduates have too much debt to manage
as a starting social worker. Graduates of private four-year colleges face even
more significant debt burdens. Thirty-eight percent (38%) of private four year
college students would face an unmanageable debt burden as a starting teacher.
Fifty-five percent (55%) of private college graduates would face serious repayment
challenges as a starting social worker.
The situation detailed in
this report does not belong to any one state or any one profession. The jobs
profiled serve as a bellwether. As students increasingly finance college through
loans, debt has become a national issue with serious policy implications that
demands a national solution.
Graduates of public and
private universities who want to become teachers may encounter greater financial
obstacles in some states than others, given the average starting teacher salary
and cost of living. The ten states in which the highest percentage of college
graduates would face unmanageable debt as a starting teacher include New Hampshire,
Wisconsin, North Dakota, Vermont, Utah, Maine, South Dakota, Montana, Connecticut,
and Minnesota.
Having such a high percentage
of students facing burdensome debt has consequences both for specific professions
of high social value and the entire economy. To solve this problem and ensure
that higher education remains within reach for all Americans, we need to increase
needbased grant aid; make loan repayment fair and affordable; protect borrowers
from usurious lending practices; and provide incentives for state governments
and colleges to control tuition costs.
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Download the full report.
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