Student Loan Debt Reaches $1 Trillion
Friday, October 21, 2011
On top of the enormous national debt and crippling mortgages burdening the United States, college graduates have become saddled with student loans that now total more than $1 trillion. This includes $555 billion in federal education loans.
With a weak economy encouraging people to go back or stay in school, and universities increasingly upping tuitions by far more than the rate of inflation, Americans are borrowing more to attain higher education.
Last year, the average amount of loans borrowed by a full-time undergraduate student was $4,963. Once inflation is factored in, it is estimated that students are borrowing twice the amount compared to what they did 10 years ago.
Borrowers are also having a hard time keeping up with payments. The default rate in 2009 was 8.8%, up from 6.7% in 2007.
-Noel Brinkerhoff
Student Loan Debt to Surpass $100B for First Time (by Kate Rogers, Fox Business)
Student Lending’s Failing Grade (by Cristian Deritis, Moody’s Analytics) (pdf)
Student Loan Debt Passes Credit Card Debt for First Time (by Noel Brinkerhoff, AllGov)
- Top Stories
- Unusual News
- Where is the Money Going?
- Controversies
- U.S. and the World
- Appointments and Resignations
- Latest News
- Bashar al-Assad—The Fall of a Rabid AntiSemite
- Trump Announces He Will Switch Support from Russia to Ukraine
- Americans are Unhappy with the Direction of the Country…What’s New?
- Can Biden Murder Trump and Get Away With it?
- Electoral Advice for the Democratic and Republican Parties
Comments