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The Unbearable Heaviness of American Student Debt

Categories: North America, U.S.A., Education, The Bridge
Day 3 of the protest Occupy Wall Street in Manhattan's Zuccotti Park. Photo by  David Shankbone  (CC BY 3.0) [1]

The state of US student debt, as presented by a participant on Day 3 of the protest Occupy Wall Street in Manhattan's Zuccotti Park. Photo by David Shankbone (CC BY 3.0)

When I was 17, and applying to university, my parents told me we’d be splitting the cost. For me, and for them, this meant taking out US federal loans that would be repaid over the next decade or more.

I was relatively lucky. As a lower-income student, I was eligible for a federal Pell Grant, [2] and was accepted into an excellent state university which, at the time, cost just a little more than $10,000 per year in tuition fees. I kept my debt down by working part-time to cover expenses, and was grateful for any help my parents could offer. After graduating from university, I participated in a year-long national service program, earning a $5,000 award [3] that went toward repaying my loans.

In the end, it took me eleven years to repay my student loans. I made my final payment on July 3 of this year.

Today, US students leave university with an average of $29,000 [4] in debt. That figure goes up for students who attend universities in larger cities—the average graduate in Washington, D.C. carries a whopping $41,000 [5] of student loan debt.

This state of affairs has led to what many pundits and scholars in the US are calling a “crisis [6],” with those hardest hit often students with smaller debts but dismal job prospects. For young graduates, the unemployment rate [7] last year was 8.5%. The math is simple: If recent graduates can’t get jobs, they can’t repay their loans.

Shortly after I moved to Germany in 2014, the state of Lower Saxony became the last region to nix tuition fees [8], making university education free for all, including non-citizens. Several other European countries (such as Finland and Slovenia) offer free university education, as do Brazil and Argentina.

It’s hard to underestimate what this idea means to an American. From the time we’re old enough to dream about college, those of us without means are also worrying about how we’ll pay for it, while others can’t fathom being able to scrape together enough just to afford the down payments. In a country where 1.2 million [9] primary and secondary school students are homeless, a college education is an extraordinary privilege.

Although the Obama administration has made significant changes [10] to the way student loans work, for many, it’s still not enough. A four-year university education in the US costs between $40,000 per year on the low end (for a student attending a public university in his or her home state) to more than $125,000 for students attending private universities—and that’s only tuition fees. Add to that the cost of housing and other life necessities, and it’s no surprise that students are opting out altogether. Which is fine—so long as it’s truly a choice.

But in today’s economic environment, it really isn’t. Last year, university enrollment in the US fell by nearly half a million [11]. Economists say that when the economy is doing well, fewer people attend colleges and universities, but when it isn’t, higher education becomes a “safe harbor.” In other words, young people are choosing the most likely path to self-sufficiency [12].

And yet, with so many jobs requiring a four-year degree, despite the high cost of attendance, not attending university can, in the long run, cost so much more in lost wages. The Pew Research Center estimates [13] the earning gap between a high school graduate and a graduate of a four-year college or university is around $17,500.

We should all be able to choose our own path. University isn’t for everyone, nor should it be. But the choice, the ability to attend should absolutely be a right extended to all, without the burden of decades of debt.