Six-figure parent loans: When college dreams for students mean nightily
Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren are already vowing to do something about student loan debt. This is why the $1.6 trillion issue could play a big part in the 2020 election. USA TODAY
ATLANTA While Aaron Greene was packing to head back to Clark Atlanta University for his junior year, he stumbled upon a college bill at his mother’s house in Stone Mountain, Georgia. The number was so large that he figured it had to be a phone number.
Though his mother, Di-Anne, already had $40,000 in student loans from her own graduate school education, she has taken out $42,000 in Parent PLUS Loans for Aaron and she had kept him in the dark about the cost.
I didn’t want to give him the pressure of starting out in college, worrying about grades as well as the finances, she said. But I probably should have (told him) so that he could get a better understanding of the sacrifice that’s been made.
Six-figure parent loans: When college dreams for students mean nightily
Parent borrowing is a sacrifice many black parents make to pay for their children’s college education, and it is especially prevalent among families whose children attend historically black colleges and universities. The federal government’s Parent PLUS program helps make attending college a reality, closing the gap between the cost of college and what the student receives in grants and other loans.
Six-figure debts
The loan program was introduced in the 1980s as a way for middle- and upper-income parents to help their children pay for college while keeping their assets liquid. It has since become more popular among lower-income parents. That’s possible because the program does not check the ability to repay, considering only the borrower’s credit history.
When parents borrow, the debt can weigh
Few white families with low incomes take out the loan just 10% of white Parent PLUS borrowers earn $30,000 or lessparatively, 40% of black Parent PLUS borrowers have incomes that low.
Parents of students at three of the city’s historically black colleges
Morehouse students attend a session on scholarships at Martin Luther King Jr. International Chapel during new student orientation. (Photo: Josephine Chu, Medill News Service)
Parents borrowing for their children’s education isn’t new. The program has existed long enough for families to see one of the consequences of taking out large loans: generations of overlapping debt.
In Texas, Prairie View A&M University graduate Tania White needed her mother to take out Parent PLUS Loans for her undergraduate education 30 years ago. White’s mother borrowed $12,000 for White’s three years of college. She is still paying it back. Since White’s graduation in 1992, her mother’s debt has accrued to more than $100,000. White said the interest rate on Evans’ $100,000 debt is about 9%.
You know how something is so outrageous where you have no expression or feeling behind it? That’s where we are with that, White said, remarking that paying back student debt has become a routine for her family.
Despite seeing her mother’s debt accumulate, White resorted to Parent PLUS Loans to pay for her daughter’s trip to study abroad. White now owes more than $200,000 between her own and her children’s student debt.