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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Degrees of debt

Sandra Block USA Today

The average college senior graduated this year with more than $19,000 in debt. That’s a problem Joe Palazzolo would love to have.

Palazzolo, 25, graduated on Mother’s Day from Rutgers University with a master’s degree in public policy and student loans exceeding $116,000. His payments will average about $800 a month. It could have been worse: Because of his top grades, Rutgers paid Palazzolo’s tuition for his final year of graduate school.

At a time when his friends are thinking about buying their first homes, he’s looking for roommates to share a three-bedroom house so he can limit his rent to $600 a month. “I feel like I’ve done everything I was supposed to do, and at the end of the day, I’ve got this huge debt,” Palazzolo says. “What did I do wrong?”

After years of rising college costs and shrinking financial aid, it’s come to this: Some graduates are now leaving college with student-loan debt in the six figures.

Graduates with more than $100,000 in debt still account for a small subset of borrowers. But their numbers are rising. And the proportion who are leaving college with some level of unmanageable debt — debt they can’t repay without significant hardship — is swelling.

In 2004, nearly 8 percent of graduating seniors carried student loans of $40,000 or more, according to the Project on Student Debt, a nonprofit advocacy group. In 1993, even adjusted for inflation, only 1.3 percent of college seniors had debt that large, says Robert Shireman, director of the project.

About 11 percent of graduates of private, nonprofit colleges have loans of $40,000 or more versus 5.5 percent for public colleges and universities, Shireman says.

The rise in unmanageable debt has raised concerns that many graduates won’t be able to pursue careers in fields that have traditionally paid modest salaries. Nearly a quarter of four-year public-school graduates and 38 percent of private-school graduates who become teachers can’t afford to repay their debts on a starting teacher’s salary, a recent report by the Public Information Research Group’s Higher Education Project found.

For social workers, the statistics were worse: 37 percent of public- and 55 percent of private-school graduates start their careers with unmanageable debt, PIRG says.

Take Emily Weinberg, 23, of Fairfax, Va. Weinberg graduated last year from Ithaca College with a bachelor’s degree in cinema and photography. Her student-loan debt exceeds $130,000.

When she was admitted to Ithaca, Weinberg says, she thought she’d qualify for a scholarship that would have covered most of her costs. She didn’t get the scholarship. Yet, her parents’ income and savings were too high for her to qualify for financial aid.

Her parents had saved more than $97,000 for her college education. But when the tech bubble burst in 2000, their college savings shrank to $23,000. With interest rates low, Weinberg borrowed.

Now, Weinberg, who works as a Web-content administrator in the Washington, D.C., area, devotes $1,200 of her $2,100 monthly take-home pay to her student loans. She lives with her boyfriend, who helps cover rent and other expenses. (Weinberg says she’s required to pay only $791 a month toward her loans, but that would cover only the interest and would make her total balance expand even more.) Her dream of starting a photography studio remains just that — a dream. “This is not at all what I wanted to be,” she says.

Sandy Baum, a policy analyst for the College Board, a membership group for colleges and universities, says there’s always been a “small subset” of graduates with unmanageable debt, but they’re not reflective of the typical borrower. Among the two-thirds of graduates with student loans, she says, the median sum (half are more and half are less) is $15,500 for public-school graduates and $19,400 for private-school graduates.

“It’s very important to understand that most students graduate with no debt or a very manageable level of debt,” Baum says. “That doesn’t mean we shouldn’t worry about” those students who are weighed down by much larger debt, she adds.

Angela Schneider, 26, graduated last year from Simmons College with a master’s degree in social work and $118,000 in student loans. To make her monthly payments of $800, Schneider has taken on a part-time job providing in-school therapy in addition to her full-time position as a medical social worker. She’s living on a tight budget that allows her $70 a month for entertainment.

Working with people in deep financial trouble, Schneider says, helps put her own problems into perspective. “I don’t need money for happiness,” she says. Still, “It sure makes it easier.”

Some graduates with unmanageable student loans acknowledge that their own actions and choices have contributed to the problem. Schneider says she has no regrets about her decision to attend Simmons College. Still, she adds, “I wish I had been a little more creative in finding financial help.”

Weinberg says she didn’t realize when she began borrowing that she could spend 30 years paying off her debt. At the same time, she says, “I signed the papers. It’s my responsibility to get out of it.”

Most student-loan payments are deferred until the borrower leaves school. This has the unfortunate effect of making it easy for students to ignore expanding balances. In many cases, students and their families don’t understand the consequences of their choices until the bills come due, Shireman says.

Other factors contributing to a rise in loan balances include:

“Shrinking federal aid. College costs have risen by more than 50 percent since 1990, but federal aid hasn’t kept up. Congress hasn’t increased the Pell Grant, the most common form of direct aid for low-income students, since 2003. (The maximum Pell Grant is $4,050 a year.)

Both low-income and middle-income families have been squeezed, Shireman says. “Grant aid has not kept pace with the increase in tuition and fees and other costs.”

“An increase in private loans. Federal Stafford loans let students borrow federally backed loans with favorable interest rates and repayment terms. Unsubsidized Stafford loans are available to all students, even if they don’t qualify for financial aid.

But there are limits to how much undergraduates can borrow. This year, the total in Stafford loans that a freshman can borrow is $2,625; for sophomores, the cutoff is $3,500. There are also limits on the amount of Stafford loans graduate students can borrow. In 2004-05, private-loan borrowing rose by about 30 percent, according to the Project on Student Debt.

As a result, many students who attend private or out-of-state schools or pursue a graduate degree often must supplement their Stafford loans with more costly private loans. These loans lack some of the advantages of federally backed loans — such as provisions that let borrowers defer payments — and are costlier, Shireman says.