This spring, the U.S. Department of Education announced that it was discharging the federal student loans of 28,000 students who attended Marinello Beauty School. In taking such action, the department was following a rule that allows it to discharge any federal loans taken out by students who were deceived by their school.1 The department found that the school misled students about the quality and content of programs; exploited students’ unpaid labor; failed to train students in key skills, such as how to cut hair; and left students without the skills to pass certification exams, find employment, and repay their loans.2

Unfortunately, the case of Marinello Beauty School is not an isolated incident. For-profit cosmetology schools like Marinello have faced multiple actions from regulators3 as well as consumer class actions alleging deceptive practices, exploitation of unpaid labor, and other misconduct.4 The risks to cosmetology students extend beyond such illegal conduct. Students attending such programs typically borrow thousands of dollars through student loans and invest months of their time in training,5 only to receive near-poverty-level earnings after graduation. Three years after completing their program, the average cosmetologist earns only $16,600 a year,6 which is $8,600 below the average earnings of workers with only a high school diploma, and only $3,000 above the single-person poverty guideline.7 In addition, cosmetology students graduate with an average of $10,200 in student loan debt.8

The number of cosmetology students at financial risk after attending these schools is large. Cosmetology schools enrolled close to 200,000 students in 2018–19.9 The programs train hairdressers, makeup artists, and manicurists. Three-quarters of cosmetology programs are offered by for-profit schools.10 Over 1,000 cosmetology schools are funded through federal student loans and grants.11 Cosmetology schools received more than $1 billion in federal loans and grants in 2019–20.12 Unfortunately, the federal loans and grants invested in these institutions have not translated into adequate earnings for program graduates.

Women and people of color make up a disproportionate share of cosmetology graduates. Ninety percent of cosmetology program graduates are women.13 Black and Latino/a students also make up an outsized share of cosmetology graduates: Black students receive 19 percent of cosmetology certifications but comprise 13 percent of the postsecondary student population,14 and Latino/a students receive 25 percent of cosmetology certifications but comprise 19 percent of the student population.15 Most cosmetology students also tend to be low-income when they enroll: 54 percent of students who attend cosmetology schools16 receive federal Pell Grants, which are awarded to students with high levels of financial need, compared with just 34 percent of all undergraduates.

This year, the Department of Education announced a plan to propose a new federal rule that will impose minimum outcome standards on cosmetology and other career-focused postsecondary programs that receive federal funding. The rule, known as the “gainful employment” rule, will tie programs’ eligibility for federal Title IV funding to measures of graduates’ debt in relation to their earnings, and to measures of graduates’ earnings in comparison to workers with only a high school diploma. If proposed as discussed in this spring’s negotiated rulemaking discussions, the earnings threshold will set an extremely low bar: programs will fail only if graduates earn, on average, less than the average working high school graduate (aged 25 to 34) earns in their state.17 The idea behind the earnings threshold is that programs that do not raise graduates’ earnings above the level of high school graduates do not provide a significant benefit to students and do not merit investment of Title IV federal financial aid, which is intended to fund degree-granting and high-value, career-focused certificate programs. The proposed gainful employment rule’s earnings threshold will ensure that cosmetology programs that leave students with near-poverty-level wages do not remain eligible for Title IV funding.

The rule would spur a much-needed revamp of the cosmetology training industry. If implemented today, nearly all cosmetology programs subject to the rule (98 percent) would not meet the very low benchmark, because program graduates earn less, on average, than workers with only a high school diploma. In addition, more than one-quarter (28 percent) of programs leave students with too much debt to meet the rule’s debt-to-earnings benchmark.18 (See Table 1 below.) Programs that do not meet either of the rule’s benchmarks for more than two out of three years will lose eligibility for federal Title IV student aid funding for a period of three years. To avoid those consequences, some schools will change their program offerings to fields that provide adequate earnings, or seek other sources of funds for cosmetology programs that may better fit low-wage training.

TABLE 1: COSMETOLOGY PROGRAMS, BY GAINFUL EMPLOYMENT RULE OUTCOMES AND SECTOR

COSMETOLOGY PROGRAMS, BY GAINFUL EMPLOYMENT RULE OUTCOMES AND SECTOR

Cosmetology Programs Subject to Debt-to-Earnings and Earnings Threshold Tests  Programs Where Graduates’ Earnings Fail Debt-to-Earnings Test Programs Where Graduates’ Earnings Fail Earnings Threshold Test  Programs Where Graduates’ Earnings Fail At Least One Test Programs Where Graduates’ Earnings Fail Both Tests 
For-profit 572 173 (30%) 562 (98%) 563 (98%) 172 (30%)
Nonprofit 5 2 (40%)  5 (100%) 5 (100%) 2 (40%)
Public 65 2 (3%) 62 (95%)  62 (95%) 2 (3%)
Total 642 177 (28%) 629 (98%) 630 (98%) 176 (27%)
Source: Authors’ analysis of data released by the U.S. Department of Education on March 15, 2022 as part of Negotiated Rulemaking. The dataset is available for download from New America at  https://www.newamerica.org/documents/7232/GE_Information_Rates_Data_03-15-22_FINAL.xlsx

Note: Table does not include fifteen programs for which the U.S. Department of Education has sufficient data for the earnings threshold test but not the debt-to-earnings test. All of these programs fail the earnings threshold test. Twelve are for-profit and three are public.

Why Are Cosmetology Programs Such a Bad Deal for Students?

Cosmetology is a notoriously low-paying field of employment, but cosmetology programs require substantial investment by students, in terms not only of money but also time.

State Licensure Requirements Contribute to the High Cost of Cosmetology Programs

State licensure requirements are a primary driver of the high cost of cosmetology programs. All fifty states and Washington, D.C. require cosmetologists to obtain licensure, and all impose a minimum number of training hours as a requirement for licensure.19 The licensure requirements are imposed, at least in part, to address public health and safety concerns associated with provision of cosmetology services. Longer training hour requirements benefit cosmetology schools, since schools can charge higher tuition for longer programs. The regulatory hurdles that state licensure requirements create also make it harder for new competitors to enter the cosmetology field, benefiting cosmetologists. Lobbying groups representing these interests play a role in driving up licensing requirements by pressuring state lawmakers to raise entry requirements.20

State training hour requirements for cosmetologists vary widely, from 1,000-hour requirements in Massachusetts and New York, to more than double that number in Iowa, Oregon, and South Dakota. In many cases, the minimum training hour requirements exceed training hour requirements for professions that may pose greater public health and safety risks than cosmetology. For example, cosmetologists must complete, on average, eleven times as much training as the average emergency medical technician (EMT).21 This suggests that cosmetologists’ minimum training hour requirements may be unnecessarily inflated.

Cosmetologists must complete, on average, eleven times as much training as the average emergency medical technician (EMT).

The evidence indicates that the state requirements are causing excessively lengthy training: a report by the Institute for Justice found that more than 95 percent of cosmetology programs’ lengths exactly matched the number of hours of education required for licensure in cosmetology in the schools’ state.22 In addition, when states lower training hour requirements, cosmetology schools generally shorten their program lengths to reflect the reduced requirements.23

Unsurprisingly, longer training hour requirements result in higher costs and higher student loan debt for cosmetology students.24 Reducing training requirements would enable schools to offer shorter, more affordable programs, reducing cosmetology students’ costs and debt burdens.25

While the Department of Education does not directly control states’ licensing requirements, the department has a plan to use Title IV eligibility requirements to indirectly influence state licensing requirements. The department is expected to propose a rule that would create an incentive for states to reduce hour requirements by limiting Title IV eligibility based on the length of programs.26 The proposed rule provides that, where the majority of states have licensure requirements for an occupation, Title IV funding eligibility will be limited to the portion of the program that does not exceed the national median of the minimum number of training hours required for licensure. For cosmetology, the national median number of hours required for licensure is 1,500.27 In states with requirements above the median, students would not be eligible for Title IV funding after completing 1,500 training hours.

The proposed rule would create a significant incentive for cosmetology schools to lobby for decreases in state licensing hour requirements in states where the minimum hours required for licensure exceeds the national median.28 Such efforts could lead state lawmakers to reduce state licensure requirements, resulting in lower-cost programs and reductions in student debt loads for cosmetology programs in those states.29

Students Often Must Perform Unpaid Labor That Benefits Cosmetology Schools

In addition to revenue from federal loans, grants, and out-of-pocket payments from students, many cosmetology schools receive revenue generated by students’ unpaid work providing salon services such as haircuts, manicures, and facials, to paying customers.30 Students may also be required to perform cleaning or administrative duties, and to sell products to customers.31 Not only do schools profit from revenues generated from their students’ unpaid labor, but schools also simultaneously receive tuition payments from students for the hours spent providing the labor. Meanwhile, students are taking on debt to pay their schools for the opportunity to perform this unpaid labor.

In some states, including New York, New Jersey, and California, cosmetology students have sued their schools seeking to enforce a right to payment for at least some types of labor provided while enrolled in cosmetology programs.32 However, courts have generally held that cosmetology students are not entitled to employment protections for labor provided as part of cosmetology training, even when that labor involves tasks that are not directly related to cosmetology skills, such as cleaning or administrative tasks.33

A New Federal Rule Would Protect Students from Investing in Low-Value Programs

The gainful employment rule was originally issued by the Obama administration in 2014, but was rescinded by the Trump administration in 2019.34 The rule applied to programs offered by for-profit colleges and to non-degree career-training programs offered by nonprofit and public colleges.35 The rule conditioned programs’ eligibility for federal student financial aid on their meeting a debt-to-earnings benchmark for their graduates.36 The rule was designed to encourage schools to improve quality and decrease program cost to ensure that students and taxpayers do not invest in programs that leave students unable to repay student loans.37

The Department of Education has announced that it plans to reinstate the rule and will issue the rule for comment in April 2023. The department has signaled that the new version will, like the earlier version, include a debt-to-earnings metric.38 The rule is also expected to include an earnings threshold that will limit eligibility for federal student financial aid to programs that demonstrate that their typical program graduates earn more than the median worker aged 25 to 34 in their state who has only a high school diploma.39

Including both a debt-to-earnings threshold and an earnings threshold in the new rule will protect students and taxpayers from investing in programs that leave students unable to pay back their loans, or earning near-poverty-level wages. Many low-value programs pass the debt-to-earnings metric because of low borrowing rates among students, but fail the earnings metric because of graduates’ inadequate earnings. Including both metrics will capture low-value programs that fail either of these tests and protect students and taxpayers from investing in programs that provide little or no benefit.

Students are in serious need of protection: nearly all cosmetology programs that are subject to the rule leave graduates with near-poverty-level wages and do not meet the proposed earnings threshold according to the most recent data.40 In fact, cosmetology programs comprise 42 percent of all programs that do not meet the earnings threshold, even though cosmetology programs make up only 16 percent of all programs subject to the rule.41

As shown in Figure 1, nearly all cosmetology programs with sufficient data for assessment fail the earnings threshold test, and many fail by a large margin.

FIGURE 1

Critics of the earnings threshold have suggested that the metric is not an appropriate method for evaluating cosmetology program outcomes because many outside factors play into determining graduates’ low earnings. We address these arguments below.

Underreported Earnings Are Not a Primary Contributor to Programs’ Poor Outcomes

Cosmetology schools have argued that applying an earnings-based metric to cosmetology programs is unfair because cosmetologists receive a significant portion of their earnings as tipped income, and this income is underreported to tax authorities, which are the source of the data used to calculate earnings outcomes.42 The 2014 gainful employment rule permitted schools with failing programs to appeal earnings rate determinations by submitting data from institutional surveys of schools’ graduates,43 but the department has indicated that the new rule will not provide for such an appeals process.

In a recent joint report from George Washington University, Columbia University, and Student Defense, researchers extrapolate from IRS findings on underreported income to estimate that approximately 8 percent of cosmetologist’s income is not reported to tax authorities.44 The report concludes that adjusting cosmetology programs’ earnings data to include the estimated unreported earnings would not substantially change the failure rates for cosmetology programs under the debt-to-earnings threshold of the 2014 gainful employment rule.45

Using the most recent data, an 8 percent adjustment would result in a 22 percent failure rate for the cosmetology programs under the debt-to-earnings metric, compared to a 28 percent failure rate without any adjustment. Similarly, an adjustment for unreported earnings would not result in a substantial change in the failure rate under the earnings threshold. An 8 percent adjustment would result in a 95 percent failure rate for cosmetology programs under the earnings threshold, compared to a 98 percent failure rate without the adjustment. While cosmetology schools may point to unreported income to explain why the earnings data show their graduates faring poorly, the reality is that these graduates earn too little for a reasonable adjustment to make a meaningful difference in these schools’ outcomes under the rule.

Part-Time Work Schedules Are Not a Root Cause of Cosmetology Programs’ Poor Outcomes

Critics of applying the debt-to-earnings and earnings thresholds to cosmetology programs have also suggested that earnings-based metrics are unfair to cosmetology programs because cosmetology students include many parents who seek to work part-time schedules. If cosmetology students do in fact work significantly fewer hours than the typical worker, that would depress cosmetology programs’ earnings outcomes. However, data from the American Community Survey show that cosmetologists typically work close to a full-time schedule: cosmetologists work an average of 34.9 hours per week, compared to a typical work week of 38.2 hours per week for other workers.46 Even if a 9.5 percent adjustment were made to programs’ median income data to account for this 3.3-hour gap, 95 percent of cosmetology programs would still fail the high school earnings threshold test.47 This suggests that part-time work schedules are not the root cause of the poor outcomes of cosmetology programs.

Gender-Based Wage Disparities Are Not the Primary Cause of Cosmetology Programs’ Poor Outcomes

Some have argued that the high proportion of women in cosmetology programs and gender-based wage disparities could also contribute to the low earnings outcomes of cosmetology programs. More than 90 percent of cosmetology students are women. In contrast, men are disproportionately represented in the general workforce—men make up around 61 percent of working 25–34 year olds with only a high school diploma.48 In addition, there is a significant earnings gap between men and women in the U.S. workforce. For example, for workers with a high school degree, the wage gap between men and women is about $8,800, or 43 percent of the average earnings for women.49 While some scholars have raised concerns that gender-based wage disparities may be correlated with program failures,50 others have found that programs’ gender composition has only a small effect on earnings threshold pass rates after accounting for other factors such as whether the program is offered by a for-profit school.51

Recently released data suggest that cosmetology programs’ poor track record of setting students up for success cannot be ascribed to gender. The gender-based wage disparity within the cosmetology field is small: one year after completing their programs, female graduates of cosmetology programs earn just 1 percent less than male graduates of the same programs.52 In fact, cosmetology programs are atypical in that there is very little gender inequity among graduates compared to other fields—when all postsecondary programs are included, women graduates earn 16 percent less than men who completed the same program.53

Figure 2 compares the earnings of men and women cosmetology graduates to those of workers in other fields where women comprise an outsized share of workers: dental assistants, educators, and nurses, alongside all fields as a reference point. We observe that cosmetology’s earnings are the same for men and women alike, around $17,000. By contrast, male nurses and male educators earn roughly 11 percent more, on average, than women who graduate from the same program. Evidently, the poverty of cosmetologists’ earnings outlooks (regardless of gender) trumps the labor market structures that bolster men’s compensation while not doing the same for women.

FIGURE 2

Accordingly, even if cosmetology programs had the same gender composition as the general population, it is unlikely that programs’ overall earnings would be significantly higher. Because male graduates of cosmetology programs see low earnings just like female graduates, the quality of education in these programs and the dearth of high-paying cosmetology jobs likely plays a greater role in cosmetology program’s gainful employment failures than the downstream effects on income from programs’ gender compositions.

The Proposed Rule Appropriately Factors In the Earnings of All Program Graduates, Even Those with No Income

Critics of the earnings threshold have also suggested that the earnings threshold, as described by the department during the winter 2022 negotiated rulemaking process, would unfairly compare earnings from all program graduates (including those with zero income) to workers with only a high school diploma (excluding those with zero incomes).54 However, including non-working program graduates while excluding non-working high school graduates is justified for one simple reason: high school attendance is compulsory while cosmetology school is a deliberate career choice. Students who invest time and money and go into debt to pursue a career-focused postsecondary degree do so in order to pursue employment in that field. Graduates of such programs who are not working are likely to be unsuccessfully seeking employment, rather than choosing to remain outside of the labor force. Accordingly, it is appropriate to compare all program graduates to workers with only a high school diploma.

Will Cosmetology Programs Clear the New Rule’s Debt-to-Earnings Threshold?

The gainful employment rule’s debt-to-earnings threshold is meant to protect students and taxpayers from investing in programs that lead to insurmountable student debt. The debt-to-earnings threshold also drives improvements in programs by creating a strong incentive for schools to reduce tuition costs, decrease students’ need to borrow, and boost program quality. A larger percentage of cosmetology programs will meet the debt-to-earnings threshold than meet the earnings threshold: 72 percent of cosmetology programs subject to the rule already pass the debt-to-earnings threshold without any adjustments. (See Figure 3.)55 If the earnings rate is adjusted by adding 8 percent to address concerns about underreported income, then 78 percent of cosmetology programs pass the debt-to-earnings test. Of programs that fail the debt-to-earnings test, virtually all (98 percent) are for-profit programs. Only one program passes the earnings test but fails the debt-to-earnings metric.56

FIGURE 3


A program fails the rule’s debt-to-earnings requirement if an exceedingly large share of students receiving financial aid have:

  • high debt relative to their total earnings, called the “annual earnings rate”;
  • and high debt relative to their earnings after protecting a certain amount for basic living expenses, called the “discretionary earnings rate.”

The annual earnings rate test determines whether the standard payment on the student loans for a program graduate would be more than 8 percent of median income three years after program completion. The discretionary earnings rate test asks whether the standard payment on the student loans for a program graduate would be more than 20 percent of discretionary income, defined as earnings above 150 percent of the poverty line, currently $18,735.

Programs would have to fail both debt-to-earnings tests to fail the gainful employment rule. Most cosmetology programs pass the first debt-to-earnings test, which compares annual loan payment with median income. However, almost all cosmetology programs fail the second debt-to-earnings test: their annual loan payment is more than 20 percent of discretionary income. As stated previously, cosmetology program graduates average $16,600 in earnings three years after graduating, which is less than the $18,735 that the Department of Education estimates is needed for everyday expenses: in other words, the average cosmetology program graduate with student loan debt must choose between paying off their debt or paying for vital life expenses, as they likely do not have the money for both.

Even though only a small percentage of cosmetology programs pass the earnings threshold but fail the debt-to-earnings threshold, the debt-to-earnings threshold should still be retained. It is not enough for programs simply to raise earnings above high school graduates’ earnings—to be worthwhile, a program must also enable graduates to earn enough to pay back their student loans. Including the debt-to-earnings metric ensures that students are not taking on debt that they will be unable to repay and creates strong incentives for schools to decrease tuition. Both measures should be retained in the new rule.

The New Rule Will Lead to Significant Changes for the Industry That Will Benefit Students

With so many Title IV participating cosmetology programs leading to near-poverty-level wages, the proposed gainful employment rule will likely cause major changes in the cosmetology training industry. The rule will drive some Title IV schools to change their program offerings by expanding or adding programs in fields that lead to higher-paying jobs and phasing out programs that lead to inadequate earnings. In addition, some Title IV schools may choose to leave the Title IV program. With the proposed rule slated for release in spring 2023, and not expected to go into effect until 2024, Title IV schools have a long lead time to consider changes to program offerings, or to lay the groundwork for pivoting to operating outside of the Title IV program. Already, a significant proportion of cosmetology programs currently operate without participating in Title IV,57 and these programs tend to be less expensive and may actually be a better deal for students.

One study by Harvard University and George Washington University economists compared for-profit cosmetology programs that received Title IV funding with similar-length programs that did not participate in Title IV and found that the non-Title IV programs were significantly less expensive. The study found that, on average, the tuition for non-Title IV programs was $3,900 less than the tuition of Title IV participating programs.58 Not only did the Title IV participating cosmetology schools charge higher tuition than the non-Title IV programs, but the price differential was roughly the same as the amount of federal aid dollars provided for each student, suggesting that participation in Title IV may have caused for-profit schools to inflate tuition above the cost of education.59 The Title IV and non-Title IV programs had similar passage rates for state licensure exams.60

A landscape where more cosmetology schools exit Title IV is not without challenges, however. If Title IV participating cosmetology training programs respond to the gainful employment rule by exiting the Title IV program, some students will be dissuaded from enrolling. For those who do enroll, the non-Title IV programs may be less expensive, but still risky. Without access to federal student loans and grants, cosmetology students may turn to private student loans or other forms of consumer debt. Private student loans and other forms of consumer debt generally have higher interest rates and offer fewer protections than federal student loans.61

Some Title IV participating cosmetology schools may seek alternate sources of revenue, such as federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (WIOA) funding, to replace Title IV. Several states, including California, Maryland, and Wyoming, currently offer students the opportunity to pursue free or very-low-cost cosmetology training through small-scale apprenticeship programs funded through WIOA.62 WIOA funding, which is targeted to un- and underemployed workers looking to gain skills, may be better suited than Title IV to fund training for low-paying cosmetology jobs.

Increasing financial investment in WIOA would help states expand the reach of such programs and improve evaluation procedures to ensure that the funds are invested in programs that provide a strong return on investment and recruit from traditionally underrepresented communities.63 The federal government should increase investments in WIOA to expand access to the programs and ensure robust outcome and quality control standards.

Recommendations

In order to protect students and taxpayers from investing in cosmetology programs that provide little or no benefit to the students they enroll, the U.S. Department of Education should move forward with a proposed gainful employment rule that includes both a debt-to-earnings threshold and an earnings threshold.

The U.S. Department of Education should also move forward with a rule that would limit Title IV eligibility by program length. The program length rule would compel states to decrease inflated minimum hour requirements, lowering costs and reducing student borrowing.

Finally, the U.S. Department of Education should consider limiting or prohibiting Title IV schools from profiting from students’ unpaid labor while collecting Title IV aid.

Congress should increase investment in WIOA’s workplace-based training programs to expand access to free or very low-cost workplace-based cosmetology training programs. Increased investment would enable states to expand access, employ robust quality control and outcome standards to ensure that funds are invested in programs that provide a strong return on investment, and increase recruitment from traditionally underrepresented communities. This investment would also allow training programs like cosmetology apprenticeships to pick up the slack that may be left behind if cosmetology programs exit the Title IV program

States should also take steps to protect cosmetology students, including by reducing inflated minimum hour requirements for cosmetology licensure and enacting legislation that extends state worker protections to students who provide services to paying customers as part of their training.

Together, these changes would require the cosmetology industry to take a serious look in the mirror about the education that beauty schools provide. While the federal government is right to discharge the loans of students who were sold a shoddy education by Marinello Beauty School, imposing these safeguards will save future students from investing time and money in programs that are not worth the investment.

The code used for the original analysis in this report can be found at this GitHub repository.

Acknowledgements

The authors thank Stephanie Riegg Cellini, Ph.D. of George Washington University; Rachel Fishman of the New America Foundation; and Marshall Anthony, Jr., Ph.D.; Kyle Southern, Ph.D.; Madison Weiss; and Casey Nguyen of The Institute for College Access and Success for their helpful feedback on a draft of this report. The opinions expressed in this report are solely the opinions of the authors.

Notes

  1. The Borrower Defense to Repayment rule, codified at 34 CFR § 685.222 (available at https://www.law.cornell.edu/cfr/text/34/685.222), permits the U.S. Department of Education to provide loan relief to students who were victims of illegal conduct by the school.
  2. “Education Department Approves $238 Million Group Discharge for 28,000 Marinello Schools of Beauty Borrowers Based on Borrower Defense Findings,” U.S. Department of Education, April 28, 2022, https://www.ed.gov/news/press-releases/education-department-approves-238-million-group-discharge-28000-marinello-schools-beauty-borrowers-based-borrower-defense-findings, and “Borrower Defense Common Statement of Facts Marinello School of Beauty,” U.S. Department of Education, March 24, 2021, https://studentaid.gov/sites/default/files/Marinello-sof.pdf.
  3. Examples of government actions against for-profit cosmetology schools include the New Jersey attorney general’s recent action against Capri Institute (see Platkin v. Capri Corporate Management, Inc., et al., Superior Court of New Jersey Chancery Division, June 3, 2022, complaint available at https://www.nj.gov/oag/newsreleases22/2022-0607_Capri-Compl), the U.S. Department of Justice’s action against Allentown Beauty School (see “United States Announces $425,000 Settlement with Allentown Beauty School for Allegedly Falsifying Federal Student Financial Aid Claims,” U.S. Department of Justice, U.S. Attorney’s Office, Eastern District of Pennsylvania, press release, June 12, 2020, available at https://www.justice.gov/usao-edpa/pr/united-states-announces), the Iowa attorney general’s action against La’ James International College (see Iowa v. La’ James College of Hairstyling Inc, et al., Iowa District Court for Polk County, August 28, 2014, petition available at https://www.iowaattorneygeneral.gov/media/cms/La), and the New York attorney general’s action against Tinny Beauty, Inc. (see “A.G. Schneiderman Reaches Settlement with Queens Beauty School For Falsifying Qualifications Of Hundreds Of Nail Specialists On Licsense Applications,” New York Attorney General’s Office, press release, April 18, 2013, available at https://ag.ny.gov/press-release/2013/ag-schneiderman-reaches-settlement-queens-beauty-school-falsifying-qualifications).
  4. Examples of class action lawsuits against for-profit cosmetology include Demer v. La’ James College of Hairstyling, Inc., et al., Iowa District Court for Polk County, May 12, 2020, petition available at https://www.defendstudents.org/cases/detmer-v-lajames/document/2020.05.13-Amended-petition.pdf; Atkins v. Capri Training Center, No. 13-06820, D.N.J. October 1, 2014; and Gerard et al. v. John Paul Mitchell Systems, 2016 WL 4479987, C.D. Ca. Aug. 6, 2016.
  5. On average, cosmetology programs take nine months of full-time training to complete. Bear in mind that not all cosmetology students are enrolled full-time. Authors’ analysis of data from the Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System, reflecting the 2019–20 academic year.
  6. Program-level earnings data in the U.S. Department of Education College Scorecard (available at https://collegescorecard.ed.gov/) are reported using median annual earnings among the graduates of each program in the pooled earnings cohort. We weighted each cosmetology program’s median earnings value by its share of graduates in the pooled earnings cohort. We use “average” as shorthand for this weighted average. See: “College Scorecard: Most Recent Data by Field of Study,” U.S. Department of Education, n.d., accessed May 2022, available for download at https://collegescorecard.ed.gov/data/.
  7. Authors’ analysis of data from the U.S. Census Bureau American Community Survey (ACS; available at https://www.census.gov/programs-surveys/acs) and the College Scorecard. The ACS data we used reflect 2018 and 2019. The College Scorecard data we used reflect a cohort of students who enrolled in academic years 2014–15 and 2015–16, and this statistic reflects their earnings in calendar years 2018 and 2019 (depending on the year of program completion), inflation-adjusted to 2020 dollars. In 2018 and 2019, the median earnings of workers aged 25 to 34 with only a high school diploma or equivalent was $25,200. The poverty threshold for a single-person household in the contiguous United States in 2022 is $13,590. See “HHS Poverty Guidelines for 2022,” U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, n.d., https://aspe.hhs.gov/topics/poverty-economic-mobility/poverty-guidelines.
  8. Program-level debt data in the College Scorecard are reported using average debt among the graduates of each program in the pooled debt cohort. We weighted each cosmetology program’s average debt value by its share of graduates in the pooled debt cohort. We use “average” as shorthand for this weighted average.
  9. Author’s analysis of data from the National Center for Education Statistics Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System (available at https://nces.ed.gov/ipeds/) reflecting the 2018–19 school year. Total enrollment at cosmetology schools in 2018–19 was 198,861.
  10. Authors’ analysis of data from the Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System, reflecting the 2018–19 academic year. The share of cosmetology programs at for-profit colleges is 77 percent.
  11. These loans and grants are made under Title IV of the Higher Education Act, which provides for federal financial aid for postsecondary students, including loans and grants. The number of cosmetology schools that participated in Title IV in 2019–20 is 1,053, according to data from the Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System. We define a cosmetology school as an institution where more than half of programs are cosmetology programs.
  12. Authors’ analysis of data from the Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System, reflecting the 2019–20 award year. Here, we aggregate federal student loans and Pell Grants to students who attend cosmetology schools, defined as an institution where more than half of programs are cosmetology programs. The Federal Student Aid Data Center also reports that $770 million in federal student loans were distributed to cosmetology students in 2018–19; see “Direct Loan Disbursements by Program,” https://studentaid.gov/data-center/student/title-iv.
  13. Authors’ analysis of data from the Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System, reflecting the 2019–20 academic year.
  14. Authors’ analysis of data from the Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System, reflecting the 2019–20 academic year. Black and Latino/a students are overrepresented in for-profit certificate programs across all fields: Black students comprise 21 percent of awards, and Latino/a students comprise 31 percent of all for-profit certificate program awards.
  15. Authors’ analysis of data from the Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System, reflecting 2018–19.
  16. For purposes of this piece, cosmetology schools are defined as schools where at least 50 percent of programs are cosmetology programs.
  17. Programs for which half of enrollment comes from out-of-state are instead subject to a threshold reflecting the median earnings for working high school graduates of the nation overall. See “Issue Paper 3: Gainful Employment Session 3: March 14–18, 2022,” U.S. Department of Education, Office Of Postsecondary Education, https://www2.ed.gov/policy/highered/reg/hearulemaking/2021/isspap3gainempl.pdf.
  18. Authors’ analysis of the “GE_Information_Rates_Data_03-15-22_FINAL.csv” dataset published by the U.S. Department of Education in March 2022 (available for download at https://www.newamerica.org/documents/7232/GE_Information_Rates_Data_03-15-22_FINAL.xlsx courtesy of the New America Foundation). Ninety percent of cosmetology programs are subject to the rule because they are offered by a for-profit school or are nondegree programs offered by a nonprofit private or public school. Of the programs that are subject to the rule, only 49 percent have sufficient data to evaluate whether they would pass the gainful employment rule metrics.
  19. “NIC State Education and Licensing Guide,” National Interstate Council of State Boards of Cosmetology, February 2022, https://nictesting.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/04/FINAL_NIC_State_Education_and_Licensing_2022_2800229FINAL-1__BOOKMARKS_4-8-22-1.pdf.
  20. Meredith Kolodner and Sarah Butrymowicz, “A $21,000 Cosmetology School Debt, and a $9-an-Hour Job,” New York Times, December 26, 2018, https://www.nytimes.com/2018/12/26/business/cosmetology-school-debt-iowa.html.
  21. Mindy Menjou, Michael Bednarczuk, and Amy Hunger, “Beauty School Debt and Drop-Outs: How State Cosmetology Licensing Fails Aspiring Beauty Workers,” Institute for Justice, July 7, 2021, 8, https://ij.org/report/beauty-school-debt-and-drop-outs/.
  22. Mindy Menjou, Michael Bednarczuk, and Amy Hunger, “Beauty School Debts and Drop Outs: How State Cosmetology Licensing Fails Aspiring Beauty Workers,” Institute for Justice, 22, https://ij.org/report/beauty-school-debt-and-drop-outs/.
  23. Mindy Menjou, Michael Bednarczuk, and Amy Hunger, “Beauty School Debts and Drop Outs: How State Cosmetology Licensing Fails Aspiring Beauty Workers,” Institute for Justice, 25, https://ij.org/report/beauty-school-debt-and-drop-outs/.
  24. Preston Cooper, “Clipping Student Debt at Cosmetology Schools,” Forbes, February 15, 2017, https://www.forbes.com/sites/prestoncooper2/2017/02/15/clipping-student-debt-at-cosmetology-schools/?sh=257316a523cf.
  25. In recent years, legislators in at least eleven states have introduced bills that would reduce the training hours required for licensure, and at least four states have lowered licensing hour requirements. (See Meredith Kolodner and Sarah Butrymowicz, “A $21,000 Cosmetology School Debt, and a $9-an-Hour Job,” New York Times, December 26, 2018, https://www.nytimes.com/2018/12/26/business/cosmetology-school-debt-iowa.html.) States that have lowered minimum hour requirements include Nevada, Utah, West Virginia, and Wisconsin. (See Mindy Menjou, Michael Bednarczuk, and Amy Hunger, “Beauty School Debts and Drop Outs: How State Cosmetology Licensing Fails Aspiring Beauty Workers,” Institute for Justice, 26, https://ij.org/report/beauty-school-debt-and-drop-outs/.)
  26. “Issue Paper 6: Certification Procedures, Session 3: March 14–18, 2022,” U.S. Department of Education, Office of Postsecondary Education, 7, https://www2.ed.gov/policy/highered/reg/hearulemaking/2021/isspap6certprocedcorrection.pdf.
  27. Dick M. Carpenter II, et al., “Occupational Profiles: Cosmetologist,” in License to Work: A National Study of Burdens from Occupational Licensing, 2nd ed. (Institute for Justice, November 13, 2017), 44, https://ij.org/report/license-to-work-2/ltw-occupation-profiles/ltw2-cosmetologist/.
  28. State minimum training hour requirements are set via state law or by state entities such as licensing boards. Both state lawmakers and licensing boards are targets of lobbying by industry players, including cosmetologist associations and associations of cosmetology school owners. In addition, licensing boards are often composed of industry players. For example, Oregon’s Board of Cosmetology consists of seven members appointed by the governor, including six certified cosmetologists with valid certificates and one public member who is not a practicing cosmetologist.
  29. However, the rule should be crafted to ensure that students do not lose Title IV funding part way through their program. The draft rule shared by the department during the negotiated rulemaking process would cut off funding to students in the middle of a program. The department should modify the rule to ensure that students do not lose funding midstream. Instead, programs should be deemed ineligible for Title IV if the program exceeds the permitted number of hours.
  30. Meredith Kolodner and Sarah Butrymowicz, “A $21,000 Cosmetology School Debt, and a $9-an-Hour Job,” New York Times, December 26, 2018, https://www.nytimes.com/2018/12/26/business/cosmetology-school-debt-iowa.html.
  31. Meredith Kolodner and Sarah Butrymowicz, “A $21,000 Cosmetology School Debt, and a $9-an-Hour Job,” New York Times, December 26, 2018, https://www.nytimes.com/2018/12/26/business/cosmetology-school-debt-iowa.html
  32. See Winfield v. Babylon Beauty School of Smithtown, Inc., 2018 WL 5298748 (E.D.N.Y. March 14, 2018).
  33. Atkins v. Capri Training Center, No. 13-06820 (D.N.J. October 1, 2014); Gerard et al. v. John Paul Mitchell Systems, 2016 WL 4479987 (C.D. Ca. Aug. 6, 2016); Ortego v. Dever Institute LLC, 2015 WL 4576976 (D. Colo. July 30, 2015).
  34. Danielle Douglas-Gabriel, “Trump Administration Formally Rescinds Rule Governing Career Training Programs,” Washington Post, June 28, 2019, https://www.washingtonpost.com/education/2019/06/28/trump-administration-formally-rescinds-rule-governing-career-training-programs/.
  35. In addition, the rule only applies to programs in which at least thirty students are enrolled.
  36. Programs failed the benchmark if graduates’ median debt was greater than 30 percent of discretionary income or 12 percent of total income. 34 CFR § 668.403(c), available at https://www.law.cornell.edu/cfr/text/34/668.403 (cornell.edu).
  37. Madison Weiss, Kyle Southern, and Kate Tromble, “Accountability that Works: restoring Gainful Employment and Strengthening Higher Education Accountability Measures,” The Institute for College Access and Success, December 2021, https://ticas.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/Accountability-That-Works.pdf.
  38. The department has signaled that the new rule will include some changes to the debt-to-earnings metric. For example, while the 2014 rule had provided debt-to-earnings benchmarks for passing, failing, or “warning zone” status, the new rule will not include a “warning zone.” The new rule is also expected to differ from the 2014 rule in that the new version will not include an appeals process for challenging the department’s determination of a programs’ earnings rate. Instead, schools will be able to appeal if a program’s Title IV eligibility is terminated via the existing appeals process provided in 34 C.F.R. § 668.91.
  39. “Issue Paper 3: Gainful Employment, Session 3: March 14–18, 2022,” U.S. Department of Education, Office of Postsecondary Education, 4, https://www2.ed.gov/policy/highered/reg/hearulemaking/2021/isspap3gainempl.pdf.
  40. This includes only those programs that are subject to the rule and for which there is sufficient data to evaluate whether the program meets the benchmark. When all cosmetology programs are considered, including those with insufficient data to evaluate or not subject to the program, nearly 50 percent of cosmetology programs fail the earnings threshold.
  41. Authors’ analysis of gainful employment data published by the Department of Education on March 15, 2022 as part of Negotiated Rulemaking. The dataset is available for download from New America at https://www.newamerica.org/documents/7232/GE_Information_Rates_Data_03-15-22_FINAL.xlsx.
  42. Stephanie Riegg Cellini and Kathryn J. Blanchard, “Hair and Taxes: Cosmetology Programs, Accountability Policy, and the Problem of Underreported Income,” Postsecondary Equity and Economics Research Project, January 2022, 1–2, https://www.peerresearchproject.org/peer/research/body/PEER_HairTaxes-Final.pdf.
  43. The appeals process imposed limitations on schools’ survey data, such as minimum response rates. However, a cosmetology school industry association successfully challenged these response rate requirements in a lawsuit. See American Association of Cosmetology Schools v. DeVos, 17-0263 (D.D.C. June 28, 2017).
  44. “Hair and Taxes: Cosmetology Programs, Accountability Policy, and the Problem of Underreported Income,” Postsecondary Equity and Economics Research Project, 4. The report notes that the IRS randomly selected 46,000 individual tax returns to study underreporting.
  45. Ibid., 5–6. The report concludes that an 8 percent earnings adjustment would result in a decrease in the cosmetology program failure rate under the 2014 Gainful Employment Rule, from a 9 percent failure rate to a 7 percent failure rate.
  46. See 2016–20 American Community Survey data (note that this just addresses cosmetology program graduates who are in the labor force and are working in the cosmetology field)
  47. Authors’ calculations using the gainful employment data released by the Department of Education, March 15, 2022.
  48. Kristin Blagg, “Disparities by Gender Complicate Proposed Accountability Metrics,” Urban Institute, April 25, 2022, https://www.urban.org/urban-wire/disparities-gender-complicate-proposed-accountability-metrics, citing American Community Survey data.
  49. Ibid. This translates to women earning about $0.70 for every dollar earned by a man.
  50. Ibid.
  51. Stephanie Riegg Cellini and Kathryn J. Blanchard, “Using a High School Earnings Benchmark to Measure College Student Success: Implications for Accountability and Equity,” Postsecondary Equity and Economics Research Project, ​ February 2022, 8–9, https://www.peerresearchproject.org/peer/research/body/2022.1.18-PEER-HSEarnings.pdf.
  52. In this analysis, we compare weighted median earnings of female cosmetology graduates from cosmetology programs who are working and not enrolled in a postsecondary program one year after completing, versus the same figures for male graduates from these programs.
  53. Authors’ analysis of data from the College Scorecard. The College Scorecard data we used reflect a cohort of students who enrolled in academic years 2014–15 and 2015–16, and this statistic reflects their earnings in calendar years 2018 and 2019 (depending on the year of program completion), inflation-adjusted to 2020 dollars. Program-level earnings data in the College Scorecard are reported using median annual earnings among the graduates of each program in the pooled earnings cohort. We weighted each program’s median earnings value by its share of graduates in the pooled earnings cohort, broken out by gender. We use “average” as shorthand for this estimate of the middle value.
  54. See “Issue Paper 3: Gainful Employment, Session 3: March 14–18, 2022,” U.S. Department of Education, Office Of Postsecondary Education, 4, https://www2.ed.gov/policy/highered/reg/hearulemaking/2021/isspap3gainempl.pdf, defining the “Earnings Threshold” as “the median earnings for a working adult aged 25–34 with only a high school diploma (or GED)— (1) In the State in which the institution is located; or (2) Nationally, if fewer than 50 percent of the students at the institution are located in the State where the institution is located” (emphasis added).
  55. Note that this only includes programs with sufficient data.
  56. Ibid.
  57. Because data from non-Title IV programs is not tracked by the Department of Education, it is difficult to estimate the percentage of cosmetology programs that operate without Title IV funding. However, one study estimates that non-Title IV receiving for-profit schools comprise at least 50 percent of for-profit institutions. Stephanie Riegg Cellini and Claudia Goldin, “Does Federal Student Aid Raise Tuition? New Evidence on For-Profit Colleges,” American Economic Journal: Economic Policy 6, no. 4, (2014): 2, https://scholar.harvard.edu/files/goldin/files/does_federal_student.pdf. The study compared tuition at Title IV participating and non-Title IV participating for-profit school cosmetology programs in Florida for the period of 2005–09. The study identified 139 non-Title IV cosmetology non-degree programs in the state that were at least 900 hours in length, compared to 608 Title IV participating programs.
  58. Ibid., 21–23.
  59. Ibid., 33. The study noted that the tuition cost differential between the non-Title IV programs and the Title IV programs could only be partially explained by the additional costs to schools of participation in the Title IV federal funding system, such as costs associated with maintaining accreditation and administering federal loans and grants.
  60. Ibid., 23.
  61. For example, private student loans, unlike federal student loans, do not provide income-based repayment options or loan forgiveness opportunities and may not provide opportunities to suspend payments via deferral or forbearance.
  62. Alaina Demopoulos,“This Little-Known Apprenticeship Program Offers a Much Cheaper Alternative to Beauty School,” Allure, May 18, 2022, https://www.allure.com/story/california-hairstylist-apprentice-program.
  63. “Sector Partnership Policy Toolkit Summary,” National Skills Coalition, October 2016,
    https://nationalskillscoalition.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/Sector-Partnership-Policy-Toolkit-Summary.pdf.