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Private Loans: Who's Borrowing and Why? Private Label Borrowing by Students Outside of the Federal Loan Programs
Private_Loans.pdf
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Executive Summary
As the purchasing power of federal and state grants continue to
decline in relation to increasing tuition and living expenses, students
have increasingly relied on loans in order to finance their college
education. Almost 65 percent of college students graduated with federal
education loan debt in 1999-2000, and the average undergraduate
borrower left school nearly $17,000 in debt with federal student loans.
Federally-backed
loan programs, including the Stafford and Perkins programs, were
instituted to offer students better terms and conditions on loans than
those available in the private market, making it easier for students to
afford higher education and later on, more manageable for students to
repay loans used to finance their education.
In recent years,
however, increases in private education loan borrowing, in which
students borrow outside of the federal loan programs, have sparked
concerns within the higher education community. Private education loans
are not subject to the same interest rate or borrowing caps as federal
student loans, nor do they offer the same flexibility in payment plans,
which can make repaying private loans a substantial burden for some
students. According to the College Board, private label education
borrowing has increased 39 percent over the past two years.
This
jump in private loan borrowing has led some to conclude that current
caps on federal education loans are too low to cover the loan funds now
needed by students. However, to fully understand the factors driving
private label student borrowing, it is necessary to take a closer look
at this population of borrowers.
This report analyzes private
label borrowing by students, using data from the 1999-2000 Department
of Education's National Postsecondary Student Aid Survey (NPSAS), to
better understand what factors drive students to borrow private
education loans. Family income, students' costs of attendance, and
borrowing in the federal programs are some of the factors discussed in
this analysis.
According to the Department of Education's data,
private label borrowing accounted for only a small percentage of
overall student borrowing, and many private label student borrowers
took on private loans without demonstrated financial need and without
taking full advantage of loans available through the federal programs.
Key findings:
•
Small percentages of students borrowed private label loans: 3.6 percent
of students overall took on private debt, and among Stafford borrowers,
only 10 percent borrowed private label loans.
• Nearly 24
percent of students with private label debt did not borrow any Stafford
loans, and 26 percent borrowed less than the available maximum Stafford
loan. The average borrower with Stafford loans below the maximum level
could have borrowed about 40 percent more in the Stafford loan program,
or $6,623 over the course of a four-year undergraduate education.
•
Nearly three quarters of private label borrowers who took on private
label debt did not have demonstrated financial need, defined by the
federal government as additional costs of attendance beyond federal
loan, work-study and grant assistance.
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