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Average Student Loan Debt: $25,250

Average Student Debt

By JUSTIN POPE   11/ 3/11 12:02 AM ET   AP

-- Members of the college class of 2010 who took out student loans owed on average $25,250 upon graduation, a 5 percent increase from the year before, according to a new analysis released Thursday.

The figures, compiled using college survey data by The Project on Student Debt, indicate average indebtedness increasing at about the same annual rate as in the last five years, but still give a fresh snapshot of what many advocates and experts call an alarming reliance on borrowed money to pay for college.

Roughly two-thirds of the class of 2010 borrowed for college, and they were hit especially hard because the unemployment rate for new college graduates stood at 9.1 percent the year they graduated – though that's less than half the rate for counterparts who only have a high school degree.

Another cause for concern: because of data limitations, the figures do not include students at for-profit college, where other recent data show 96 percent of graduates have loans and they borrow nearly 50 percent more than those who graduate from other four-year schools.

Debt levels do vary widely from school to school, and from region to region. The average level at individual colleges ranges from $950 to over $55,000. The report identifies 15 nonprofit institutions where students graduate with unusually high debt levels, a list that encompasses schools ranging from Regent University in Virginia to New York University to a number of art schools.

Meanwhile, students in the Northeast and Midwest generally had substantially higher debts than those in the West. New Hampshire had the highest average graduating debt of any state at $31,048, while Utah was lowest at $15,509.

These figures, on top of last week's College Board report showing a 7.3 percent increase this year in tuition prices at public four-year colleges, highlight the challenge of college affordability at a time when states have significantly cut support for higher education.

Still, the report notes the figures could have been worse. Though unlucky in the job market, the class of 2010 finished school just as a large wave of federal financial aid was washing into the system. In 2009-2010 federal spending on Pell Grants to low-income students – which do not need to be repaid and thus reduce the need to borrow – roughly doubled from two years before to over $30 billion. Over that time, the average grant increased roughly $1,000 to $3,751, according to data from last week's College Board report. However, the long-term trend is that even as the Pell Grant has risen, it's covered a lower and lower share of the actual cost of attending college.

Complaints about student debt have been front and center at a number of the Occupy Wall Street protests. Last week, President Barack Obama announced steps to protect borrowers from burdensome monthly payments, including a program to encourage loan consolidations and speeding up new options that can cap monthly payments based on a percentage of income for federal borrowers.

The report estimates at least 22 percent of the class of 2010's student debt comes in the form of private loans, which typically have higher interest rates and fewer borrower protections than loans from the federal government. Students are generally advised first to borrow the maximum from the government before turning to private loans. But previous research by The Project on Student Debt shows a majority of those who take out private loans haven't done so.

"How you borrow, not just how much you borrow, really matters," said TICAS president Lauren Asher. "If you have federal student loans, Iincome-based repayment, unemployment deferment, and other options can help you manage your debt even in these tough times,"

The Project on Student Debt is affiliated with California-based TICAS, or The Institute for College and Success, an independent nonprofit that promotes higher education access and affordability.

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Justin Pope covers higher education for The Associated Press. You can reach him at twitter.com/jnn_pope97

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-- Members of the college class of 2010 who took out student loans owed on average $25,250 upon graduation, a 5 percent increase from the year before, according to a new analysis released Thursday. ...
-- Members of the college class of 2010 who took out student loans owed on average $25,250 upon graduation, a 5 percent increase from the year before, according to a new analysis released Thursday. ...
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07:00 PM on 11/08/2011
has anyone figured in how many parents thought they were doing the right thing and co signed college loans....they are now into there 401k facing bankruptcy foreclosure....we really believed that we were helping the next generation have a piect of there American Dream.....wonder if they will ever see it?
beachnut28
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Moravecglobal
08:57 PM on 11/05/2011
Higher education students' loan debts curtail their futures, especially at University of California Berkeley. Current pay increases for generously paid University of California Faculty is arrogance. Instate tuition consumes 14% of Ca. Median Family Income!
Paying more is not a better education. UC Berkeley(# 70 Forbes) tuition increases exceed the national average rate of increases. Chancellor Birgeneau has molded Cal. into the most expensive public university.
UC President Yudof, Cal. Chancellor Birgeneau($450,000 salary) dismissed many much needed cost-cutting options. They did not consider freezing vacant faculty positions, increasing class size, requiring faculty to teach more classes, doubling the time between sabbaticals, cutting & freezing pay & benefits for chancellors & reforming pensions & the health benefits.
They said such faculty reforms “would not be healthy for UC”. Exodus of faculty, administrators? Who can afford them and where would they go?
We agree it is far from the ideal situation, but it is in the best interests of the university system & the state to stop cost increases. UC cannot expect to do business as usual: raising tuition; granting pay raises & huge bonuses during a weak economy that has sapped state revenues & individual Californians’ income.
Opinions? Email the UC Board of Regents marsha.kelman@ucop.edu
12:42 AM on 11/04/2011
It's sad... we are forcing our future to beg for money. Does not make sense.
10:29 PM on 11/03/2011
I really like how everyone thinks that just because they worked full-time during college and paid for it themselves, got grants, scholarships, parents paid for it or went to state schools, etc that everyone in this country can do the same exact thing. Its not going to work for the majority of students. Not everybody can work full-time due to other obligations or even find a job paying them enough to cover tuition plus household expenses, will have well off parents that will cover the cost or get grants and scholarships. Also, if anyone went to college during the 50s-80s, we don't wanna hear from you. You cannot compare your era to now. Jobs that you once had may not exist in the same form due to technology, computers or globalization. Loans are needed nowadays. Students just need to make sure that they know what they want to do with their life and follow their major guide sheet. Only take classes needed for graduation nothing else. Colleges will definitely try to get you to take classes that you don't need prolonging graduation and increasing your debt load.
10:09 AM on 11/04/2011
You put your point well. I had scholarships and I still needed loans to cover tuition gaps because since I've been in college, my school has raised tuition every school year.
01:55 PM on 11/03/2011
It is time to attack Big Education.

Why does the Left go after "Big Oil", "Big Pharma", "Big Retail", "Big Hollywood", and "Big JourNOlism" and yet Big Education gets a free pass.....
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Grogger
Nothing is guarded more fiercely than unfair gain
03:14 PM on 11/03/2011
Now you're talking!
10:10 AM on 11/04/2011
Big Education? Why does the government continually defund state and public universities? There's nothing big about education except maybe the private schools making a profit off student loans.
11:16 AM on 11/03/2011
That's a lot of "Benjamins".
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Pretrib
The borrower becomes the lender's slave.
11:01 AM on 11/03/2011
Supply and demand rules can apply here. If the government stopped subsidizing via loans and grants, the colleges would have to drop their prices as less and less attend. College and Universities continue to raise rates because they know they will get the money, one way or the other. If my neighbor wants to go to college, why should I pay for it? I am already paying for my three children right now (and they will be too). No one paid for my college debt or my spouse. What has happened in this country to taking personal responsibility for your choices and actions? We have become a bunch of whiny, high maintenance, lazy, entitled citizens and made government our "god" and expect this "Nanny State" to meet all our needs, from cradle to grave. College may not be for everyone. If you want to go and can't afford it, work for a few years and save money. It may be far more valuable to you after you have worked a while and can afford it. Maybe after some work experience, that wisdom will help you target a degree that can actually be used when you get out.
10:26 AM on 11/03/2011
Sadly, I have a bit more than $25K in student loan debt. However, it was based on choices I made.

Some people have few choices; however, most students did. They could have gone cheaper routes, such as a state college close to home rather than an expensive college away from school. they could have worked more though school, etc.
10:35 AM on 11/03/2011
And with all the grants and scholarships available for maintaining high GPA, there really is no excuse to not earn free financial aid.
After all, if you are not going to get good grades, then why go to school?
10:48 AM on 11/03/2011
Its hard to get it free; however, the point is correct. There are ways to get an education with coming out with a huge debt. I know that I made some choices, and well I am paying for it.

how much money could be saved by going cheaper routes? for example there are people who go to a local community college to get the the first two years out of the way. Then they transfer to a school such as Georgia Tech, for their last two years for engineering classes. Then they can get a GT engineering degree for a lot lower cost.
11:00 AM on 11/03/2011
Grants are not attached to grades.
10:39 AM on 11/15/2011
Much like you, my wife and I came out of college with College debt (shocker) We are both teachers who make under 34k, I had no other choice to come out of school with nearly 30k in debt. I got scholarships for my grades and athletic performance but still did not cover all of the cost. So in order for me to maintain my scholarships for sports I could not work a job so I had to take out a little extra in loans to cover living expenses. I could have went to the state college but would not have received any aid and actually came out a little bit more in debt. Am I upset with my situation no, does it suck yes, but in the scheme of things I have a job I love, and over time I will be able to pay my loans off. The issue is that there are a lot of students out there that get tons and tons of free financial aid then quit school that are in my mind screwing others over. In order to help pay for those drop outs and loans that are in default they raise rates making loans larger to pay off
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acatlett6
10:16 AM on 11/03/2011
It's more than 25K. Unless 25K represents those that haven't completed their degree.
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Rasebiho
You're getting tea. Do you want sugar or lemon?
10:12 AM on 11/03/2011
Back in the olden days; well you really don't care, do you. Coming out of college owing the price of a house is a problem, but owing the price of a car is not unreasonable. And of course it always depends on whether or not the skills you acquired in college are marketable.

But my conclusion is the college debt crisis is generally inflated into more of a problem than it really is.
stumanchu35
Tolerance is a one way street.
10:06 AM on 11/03/2011
One of the biggest scams out there. Any industry that has raised their rates 1/10 of what tuition costs have gone up get hauled up before congress to testify why. Big Education gets a pass. The federal government gives guaranteed loans to anyone, and students are now sinking in debt. One of the biggest scams ever, and this bubble will burst soon, just like the sub-prime mortgage bubble did. Occupy Big Education!!
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10:00 AM on 11/03/2011
I hate to say it, but the worth of the debt is directly related to the degree. My wife racked up over $40k in loans, but, as a nurse, was able to very quickly pay it off. That's not to say a college degree must be one that leads to a job that pays well. But if you're going to accumulate notable debt, it's best to have a well-paying job awaiting you at the end of it.

Sure, a there's still no guarantee of a job. There is, however, much higher likelihood of employment in the healthcare industry than there is studying Russian Literature or Post-Modernistic Poetry. Minor in one and lay your future wealth on the other.
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jasev01
09:56 AM on 11/03/2011
That's all. What a joke, I wish
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gr8bsn
An equal opportunity offender since 1978
09:54 AM on 11/03/2011
If you went to college in the 90s, 80s, or earlier, please don't waste our time telling us how you "paid as you went" "worked full time" or "didn't take out loans." It doesn't work that way anymore.
10:19 AM on 11/03/2011
Yes it does. I know plenty of people who have got scholarships, grants, etc and then graduated without debt. I also know plenty of people who graduated in 6 or 7 years rather than 4 and are debt free.
10:26 AM on 11/03/2011
It does, depending on the choices you make.
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09:44 AM on 11/03/2011
When I was in college I went part time and paid the bill when it came due. I did borrow $4,000 once and it seemed like it took forever to pay off. My degree never once got me a job. My daughter will graduate in December with a BS and absolutely no debt. Pay as you go worked for her too. So many worthless degrees in academia. They do a good job of marketing too. Get your degree, make more money. Some should be investigated for fraud.