Executive Summary

As Americans’ collective federal student loan debt exceeds a trillion and a half dollars, it has captured the nation’s attention and spurred calls for forgiveness and reform.1 Last week, sources within the Biden administration indicated that the White House is finalizing plans to cancel $10,000 in federal student loan debt per borrower. This historic move will no doubt trigger nationwide debates about the merits of relieving student loan borrowers, who on average are younger and higher-income than other Americans, of their debts.2 Whether the public considers this move appropriate carries significant electoral implications.

But the public needs to know that not all student loan borrowers are young, college-educated, and on the rise in their careers. Some of them are retired. Some never enrolled in college at all. And these borrowers, though little discussed, might be among the most deserving of debt relief.

What the national discussion has mostly ignored is Parent PLUS borrowers, the more than 3.7 million families whose parents owe upward of $104 billion through a unique federal student loan program that they used to help pay for their children’s undergraduate educations.3 Parent PLUS loans differ from typical federal student loans in several key ways. The most obvious difference, of course, is that the people going into debt—parents—are not the ones receiving the benefits of an education. But less obvious is that the terms of these loans are less favorable for borrowers than those of other federal student loans for undergraduate education, and the options available to borrowers to reduce monthly payments, or to seek forgiveness of all or part of the debt, are less generous than for other federal student loans. This makes Parent PLUS loans one of the riskiest federal student loan options.

Furthermore, Parent PLUS loan amounts skew high compared to those for other student loans for undergraduate study,4 and data show that parents often struggle to repay. When a student whose parent(s) borrowed completes their program, the median Parent PLUS debt load shouldered by their parents is roughly $29,600. After ten years—the length of the standard Parent PLUS repayment plan—more than half of the initial balance (55 percent) still remains, on average, because parent-borrowers have trouble maintaining the repayment schedule; after twenty years, the remaining balance is still a whopping 38 percent.5 In other words, many parents spend more years paying off their Parent PLUS loans than the years they spent living with and raising the child whose education their loan supported.

Many parents spend more years paying off their Parent PLUS loans than the years they spent living with and raising the child whose education their loan supported.

The most vulnerable Parent PLUS borrowers, if they cannot repay, may even see their access to basic subsistence cut off. In 2015, 40,000 disabled or retired Parent PLUS borrowers saw portions of their Social Security benefits withheld from them after defaulting on their loans.6

This report provides new analyses from a range of data sources to understand how Parent PLUS has morphed from a niche program for middle-class families into a driving cause of some of the worst outcomes for families who receive federal student loans, and especially for Black families. Our analysis reveals the following:

  • The share of Black Parent PLUS borrowers whose families have so little wealth or income that their expected family contribution (EFC) to a college education (as calculated by the U.S. Department of Education) is zero rose from 15 percent in 2008 to an astonishing 42 percent in 2018. The share for similar Latino/a Parent PLUS borrowers is also high, exceeding 25 percent.
  • Sixty-eight institutions show 10 percent of parents or fewer making progress after three years. Fifty-nine of them—nearly 90 percent—are HBCUs.
  • Ten years after starting repayment, the parents who received Parent PLUS loans and had children attending the top colleges for Black enrollment still owe on average 96 percent of their principal, compared to 47 percent among those whose children attended the top colleges for white enrollment.
  • Many more Black parents (33 percent) and Latino/a parents (29 percent) who hold student loans for their children’s education also hold student loans for their own education, compared to just 13 percent among white parents who hold these loans.7
  • In the month they were surveyed, 37 percent of Black parent-borrowers said they expected to be unable to make a partial payment on their student loan bills, compared to 20 percent for all other groups.8

Because low-income families, and especially Black and Latino/a parents, are disproportionately taking out Parent PLUS loans, their heavy use and unfavorable terms and conditions exacerbate the racial wealth gap. The situation presents particular quandaries for the HBCUs where use of these loans is greatest.

Two major implications for policy emerge. The first is that any broad action by the Biden administration to cancel federal student debt should include the families currently trapped by debt due to Parent PLUS loans. A wave of forgiveness, such as $10,000 per borrower, would change the lives of hundreds of thousands of struggling parents. Though the full details of the plan are not yet public and potentially in flux at the time of this report’s publication, it is highly important that this forgiveness be performed on a “per borrower” basis, not a “per student” basis, in order to capture these parents.

The second implication is that the nation needs a larger reckoning on the underlying causes of dependency on this program among families and the colleges their children attend, and the lasting damage that college-related debt burdens cause families, especially families of color. Existing proposals for reform have largely focused on programmatic changes to Parent PLUS that Congress could enact, such as adjusting the rules of Parent PLUS to make fewer parents eligible and reduce how much they can borrow.9 While these changes would decrease the risk of repayment struggles for new borrowers, they would also put college further out of reach for the children in many low-income families. Changing the rules of the program for future borrowers is just one step needed out of several, including new federal investment in college affordability at financially strained institutions such as HBCUs.

Introduction

The way that families pay for the expensive and still-rising cost of college is changing, with parents taking on a greater share of the financial burden, financed through loans. Across the landscape of undergraduate education, reliance on the federal Parent PLUS program has grown remarkably in the past twenty years. Consider the following:

  • Prior to enrollment declines caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, annual Parent PLUS disbursements nationwide had tripled from about $5 billion in 2000 to over $15 billion by 2016, driven mostly by a 269 percent increase in their use for attendance at public universities.10 (See Figure 1.)
  • At the Texas A&M System, one of the largest public university systems in the country, annual Parent PLUS loan totals rose from $56 million to $253 million between 2009 and 2019.11
  • At some large for-profit colleges, Parent PLUS makes up the majority of all financial aid received by undergraduates.12
  • Use of the Parent PLUS program varies widely. While some colleges seldom see their students receive such loans, parents whose children have attended Penn State University alone are currently carrying $1.4 billion in outstanding debt.13
  • The U.S. Department of Education estimates that between 50 percent and 55 percent of undergraduates at Clark Atlanta University receive Parent PLUS loans.14 In other words, at Clark Atlanta University, the undergraduate population features more Parent PLUS recipients than non-recipients.
Figure 1

Because the Parent PLUS program was originally intended to give high-asset families flexibility in how they pay for their children’s college, Congress created it with higher interest rates and origination fees that would fully cover the federal program’s administration costs.15 These details, however, also make Parent PLUS loans more expensive for borrowers, particularly over the long run, and thus a less than ideal choice for low-income, low-wealth families. Parent PLUS loans are also ineligible for most income-driven repayment plans offered by the federal government, and they are as difficult as any other student loan to discharge in bankruptcy.16 And yet, they are remarkably easy to obtain, with applications for tens of thousands of dollars completed and processed in mere minutes.17 The amount a family can take out in Parent PLUS is capped by nothing but the balance of their child’s full tuition and other expenses after applying other aid.18

The features of the Parent PLUS program described above can create a perfect storm of financial troubles for families without high income or access to wealth, and so through Parent PLUS, a family can find themselves loaded with enormous debt. When issuing these loans, the government assumes that the family understands the long-term consequences of signing the loan agreement. As with all student loans, while some Parent PLUS borrowers can repay without hardship, others struggle, entering delinquency or default. But unlike other federal student loans, the burden of repayment for a Parent PLUS loan falls on the parent, not the child. Many parents are likely to enter repayment with few opportunities to improve their earnings, while some will even be on the cusp of retirement.

Ability to repay Parent PLUS is a matter of income and wealth. Parent PLUS poses a dilemma for Black and Latino families in particular, who may view higher education as one of the only available opportunities to ensure their child achieves upward mobility. As much as Parent PLUS opens doors for their children, it can close doors for the parents: as a result of these loans, they could find themselves unable to retire at the age they otherwise would, having to pull from savings sooner than they planned, or even living below the poverty line if their Social Security payments must be offset due to loan default.19

Seeking to help their children find upward mobility through higher education, low-income and low-wealth parents taking out these loans risk making themselves downwardly mobile, a consequence no family should suffer in the name of college opportunity. The following sections use the latest data to examine in detail how the most vulnerable families rely on Parent PLUS and face compounding financial challenges during repayment.

In this report, we primarily focus on disparities between Black or Latino/a parents and white parents. Statistics on other groups are limited by sample size constraints, but they are presented in this report where samples are sufficient.

What Parent PLUS Equals for Black and Latino Families

Congress established the Parent PLUS program in 1980 with the intention of making it easier for parents who had the ability to pay tuition—that is, the financial aid formulae showed them as having positive expected family contributions (EFCs)—but faced current liquidity constraints and preferred not to make their children seek additional loans.20 Documents from a congressional hearing in 1980 indicate a prevailing assumption that the program would serve middle-class families: proponents argued that it recognized “the reality that middle-income families are feeling hard-pressed to pay colleges’ bills out of current income” and “growing evidence that many middle-income families are finding it difficult in the short term to provide the funds expected from them in the form of the parental contribution.”21

In the four decades since, college enrollment by students from low-income families has increased, and the price of college has risen significantly.22 In response, families at all income levels have shown increased reliance on the Parent PLUS program to pay for college. (See Table 1.) Unfortunately, this means the program is now used by many families who do not fit the intended middle-class parent mold.

For example, the percentage of students from families living under the federal poverty line who receive Parent PLUS loans has risen from 1 percent to 3 percent since the mid-1990s, with a similar rise for those whose families live between 100 percent and 200 percent of the federal poverty line. While 3 percent may seem low, it represents a hundred thousand families every year who are barely scraping by, for whom even a small loan is a risky venture.

When we combine this with the fact that low-income families are enrolling in college at a higher rate, we find that there were roughly 3.5 times as many Parent PLUS recipients from under the poverty line in 2018 compared to 1996.

Table 1
Estimated Parent PLUS Loan Recipients, By Income, 1996 Versus 2018

Proportion of Federal Poverty Line (FPL)

Share of All Undergraduates, 1996 Percentage Who Received Parent PLUS, 1996 Estimated Parent PLUS Recipients, 1996 Share of All Undergraduates, 2018 Percentage Who Received Parent PLUS, 2018

Estimated Parent PLUS Recipients, 2018

Up to 100% FPL 18.8% 1.3% 30,000 21.8% 2.9% 104,000
101–200% FPL 22.3% 1.5% 42,000 24.6% 3.0% 126,000
201–300% FPL 17.6% 4.0% 86,000 17.8% 4.4% 131,000
301–400% FPL 14.0% 5.3% 90,000 10.2% 7.3% 125,000
Greater than 400% 27.2% 5.0% 167,000 25.6% 7.0% 300,000
All students 100% 3.4% 417,000 100% 4.7% 787,000
Source: Author’s analysis of data from the National Postsecondary Student Aid Study and the Digest of Education Statistics, Table 303.70. Totals may not match due to rounding.

Today, most Parent PLUS recipients also receive Pell, placing them among the most low-income and low-asset families enrolled. At public institutions, 50 percent of Parent PLUS recipients receive Pell; at nonprofit colleges, 52 percent receive Pell; and at for-profit colleges, 71 percent receive Pell. Meanwhile, at HBCUs, 80 percent of Parent PLUS recipients receive Pell.23 These high rates of program use are just one indication of how the soaring cost of college has led many low-income, low-wealth families to essentially sign away their financial futures by taking on Parent PLUS loans.

Parent PLUS amounts are high, with the average annual disbursement topping $18,000 as of the 2019–20 award year, up from $12,000 in inflation-adjusted dollars in 1999–2000.24 And Parent PLUS is not the only student loan debt a family may have. Because Parent PLUS loans have a higher interest rate than Stafford loans, many families turn to Parent PLUS only after tapping other federal student loan options.25 Consider that students who earned a bachelor’s degree in 2015–16 and received Parent PLUS averaged approximately $29,000 in Stafford loan debt, $33,000 in Parent PLUS debt, and $4,000 in private loan debt, totaling $66,000 in loan debt for the whole family—roughly $80,000, after adjusting for inflation.26

This forms what New America’s Rachel Fishman coined as the “intergenerational loan debt” that Parent PLUS families carry.27 And these totals don’t include the home equity loans and high-interest credit card debt that a family may have taken on for their child’s education: these are not tracked by Department of Education sources, but estimates using Federal Reserve data indicate that about 12 percent of parent-borrowers use a home equity loan for their child’s education and 18 percent use credit card debt.28

Though the establishment of Parent PLUS was race-neutral on its face, the changing nature of Parent PLUS has racial contours. Between the 1995–96 award year and the 2017–18 award year, the share of Black students whose parents took out Parent PLUS loans rose from 3.5 percent to 6.2 percent, a larger increase than that for white students (3.6 percent to 5.1 percent).29 Meanwhile, the rates for Latino/a students saw a considerable rise relative to a low starting point, from 2.0 percent to 3.1 percent.30 (See Table 2.)

Considering growth in enrollment has occurred over this period as well, we find the annual number of Black Parent PLUS borrowers nearly tripled between 1996 and 2018. Meanwhile, Latino/a Parent PLUS borrowers nearly quadrupled over this period, though from a lower starting point, and this is driven in large part by greater enrollment by Latino/a students.

Table 2
Estimated Parent PLUS Recipient, by Race/Ethnicity, 1996 Versus 2018
Group Share of All Undergrads, 1996 Percentage Who Received Parent PLUS, 1996 Estimated Parent PLUS Recipients, 1996 Share of All Undergrads, 2018 Percentage Who Received Parent PLUS, 2018 Estimated Parent PLUS Recipients, 2018
White 69.9% 3.6% 311,000 50.8% 5.1% 431,000
Black 12.3% 3.5% 53,000 13.7% 6.2% 143,000
Latino/a 10.4% 2.0% 26,000 19.0% 3.1% 99,000
Asian/Pacific Islander 5.8% 3.1% 22,000 10.4% 3.1% 54,000
Native American 1.0% 1.9% 2,000 1.5% 1.9% 5,000
Other 0.7% 2.7% 2,000 4.6% 7.1% 55,000
All students 100% 3.4% 417,000 100% 4.7% 787,000
Source: Author’s analysis of data from the National Postsecondary Student Aid Study and the Digest of Education Statistics, Table 303.70. Totals may not match due to rounding.

With the marked overall increase in program use by Black and Latino/a families, on top of high rates of use by low-income, low-wealth families, there is little surprise, then, that Parent PLUS borrowing has grown the most at colleges that serve more low-income and Black and Latino/a students. And at these institutions, Parent PLUS is taking up a greater share of the financial aid students receive. Of particular note, HBCUs have for the better part of a decade surpassed other institution types for the share of undergraduate financial aid comprised by Parent PLUS, and by a sizable margin. (See Figure 2.)

Figure 2

It would take more than just this report to explain why parents of HBCU students feel compelled to access funds through the Parent PLUS program to pay for the cost of college. My colleague Denise Smith has explained the financial challenges due to historic underfunding of these institutions, as well as the affordability challenges faced by families whose children attend them.31 With all this in mind, then, it is not surprising that HBCUs comprise many of the institutions where reliance on Parent PLUS is greatest. To showcase how dire the situation is for HBCU attendees, for example, out of all the nation’s institutions of higher education, there are only six that enroll at least 2,000 undergraduate students per year, see 25 percent of their undergraduates’ families borrow via Parent PLUS, and have a median total Parent PLUS loan principal of $40,000 or more when the student leaves the college.32 Five of these six institutions are HBCUs.33 In other words, many families at these institutions have to borrow greatly for their children to attend college, even if they attend institutions that were explicitly set up for them. This comports with prior research, which found that more than one in five HBCU students and their families used Parent PLUS to pay for 30 percent or more of their college costs.34

The racial wealth gap is both a source of these disparities in Parent PLUS usage and a barrier to repayment. Researchers at Brookings estimated that, in 2016, the typical Black family’s net worth was $17,150, compared to $171,000 for the typical white family—a tenfold disparity.35 Of students who graduated with their bachelor’s degree that same year, the percentage of Black students who received Parent PLUS loans resulting in a debt load in excess of the typical Black family’s net worth was 44 percent.36 By contrast, the percentage of white students who received Parent PLUS loans in excess of the typical white family’s net worth was just 0.4 percent.37

Moreover, as Rachel Fishman has found, Black families and white families do not borrow through Parent PLUS in the same ways.38 For the families of white students, as income increases, so does Parent PLUS take-up: more of those who can repay take on Parent PLUS. For the families of Black students, the opposite is true; as income decreases, Parent PLUS take-up increases. These same patterns also hold when considering total college-related intergenerational debt, when loans held by the dependent student are included.

This means that, in comparison to other groups, Black Parent PLUS borrowers are likely to be poorer. In 2012, 33 percent of the Black families who took on a Parent PLUS loan had no expected family contribution (EFC), meaning they were too poor to be able to pay anything out of pocket for college.39 These are families whose finances are in the most dire of straits. It is no coincidence, then, that when the Department of Education required Parent PLUS borrowers to pass an adverse credit history check starting in fall 2012, HBCUs’ annual Parent PLUS disbursements fell 36 percent within one year.40 (This credit history check has since been scaled back, allowing for exceptions based on extenuating circumstances and the support of an endorser.41)

These patterns, in which an outsized share of Black Parent PLUS borrowers are also poor, are growing more extreme. By 2016, 40 percent of Black Parent PLUS recipients were zero-EFC,42 and as of 2018, the figure had risen to 42 percent.43 Meanwhile, in 2018, 26 percent of Latino Parent PLUS recipients were zero-EFC, whereas the share was 8 percent for white students.44 (See Figure 3.) All this bodes poorly for these families’ repayment prospects.

Figure 3

Can Students Help Their Parents Repay?

One rationale for why a family might take on Parent PLUS loans is that the child, who would become more educated as a result of the loan, could chip in for loan repayment. There is no accurate data available to track how often these adult children contribute to paying the monthly Parent PLUS bills, or a portion of them, but comparing Parent PLUS debt loads to adult children’s income would show how challenging it would be for the typical Parent PLUS child to assist their parent(s) with repayment.

In Table 3 below, the average intergenerational loan debt—the parent’s loans and the child’s loans—is compared with the adult child’s income ten years after they earn their bachelor’s degree, reflecting a survey sample of students who graduated in 2007–08.45 Across all racial groups, the typical adult child’s annual income had not yet surpassed the original intergenerational debt amount ten years after graduating. Helping parents pay down their Parent PLUS loan debt appears challenging for Latino/a students in particular, whose families leave college with an average debt load (including Parent PLUS) of $77,000, compared with an average income of $62,000 ten years after graduating.46

Table 3
Total Intergenerational Debt Compared to Average Annual Income of Bachelor’s Degree Recipients Whose Parents Took Out Parent PLUS, Ten Years after Graduation, By Race
Race Parent PLUS Balance, at Time of Award of Bachelor’s Degree Balance of All Other Loans for Education Total Intergenerational Debt, Including Parent PLUS  Average Annual Earnings, Ten Years after Bachelor’s Degree Ratio of Debt to Earnings Ten Years after Bachelor’s Degree
White $24,939 $48,647 $73,586 $72,213 1.02
Black $16,510 $55,919 $72,429 $66,258 1.09
Latino/a $23,884 $53,328 $77,212 $61,743 1.25
Asian $23,149 $65,069 $88,218 $76,840 1.15
Other $24,276 $53,876 $78,152 $66,871 1.17
All students $23,972 $50,443 $74,415 $71,017 1.05
Source: Author’s analysis of Baccalaureate and Beyond (2008/18) survey data, a longitudinal study of bachelor’s degree earners conducted by the U.S. Department of Education. Datalab table retrieval number: #hrygwq. Only those who were in the workforce at the time of the 2018 interview were included in this analysis.

A parent may face difficulty in Parent PLUS repayment, but so too may their child in repaying the rest of their federal loans. Moreover, it would be wrong to assume that Parent PLUS parents only enroll their children in degree programs that are certain to yield a high-paying job. Looking at enrollment data for students from Parent PLUS families reveals the following:

  • Aggregated together, bachelor programs in culinary arts rank among the ten programs with the highest shares of students receiving Parent PLUS.47
  • Two of the top ten colleges by the percentage of students receiving Parent PLUS are dramatic arts schools.48
  • Six of the ten colleges with the greatest average outstanding Parent PLUS loan balances—all over $67,000—are arts and design colleges.49

The data sadly confirm the conventional wisdom that these are not well-paying fields. Of credential earners who had started college in 2011–12 and weren’t still enrolled in 2017, those majoring in “visual and performing arts” and “personal and culinary services” ranked in the bottom five for annual income out of thirty-two fields of study, with annual salaries of $28,929 and $23,885, respectively.50 (For more data, see Appendix 1 Tables A1 through A4.)

Repayment Struggles

Parent PLUS loan use exhibits a concerning pattern where an outsized share of those who would struggle to repay these loans take them on. But do families indeed struggle to repay, and to what extent? For years, researchers have had only limited data to answer this question.51 The U.S. Department of Education has previously estimated that around one in eleven Parent PLUS borrowers will default,52 and research suggests that this is closer to one in five for the parents of Black students receiving Parent PLUS loans.53 But this information does not reveal anything about how much repayment outcomes vary by institution, and until recently, the best available survey data to figure that out relies on a sample of students who first enrolled in college a decade and a half ago.

In 2021, however, the Department of Education released an update to the College Scorecard that significantly improves public access to data on Parent PLUS repayment, both in terms of borrowers’ repayment statuses and borrowers’ balances over time. This section of the report provides the first major examination of these Parent PLUS repayment data since their release.

One useful way to assess difficulties in student loan repayment is to look at the ratio of outstanding loan debt to initial loan principal over a series of years (the so-called dollar-based repayment rates). Figure 4 looks at this debt-to-principal ratio for Parent PLUS borrowers for cohorts who entered repayment 1, 4, 5, and 10 years prior, as provided by the College Scorecard.54 Aggregating the top fifty institutions for Black students’ shares of enrollment and aggregating the top fifty institutions for white students’ shares of enrollment, we observe a strong contrast. At the ten-year mark, the length of a standard Parent PLUS repayment plan, the parents of Parent PLUS recipients at the top colleges for Black enrollment still owe 96 percent of their principal, versus 47 percent among those at the top colleges for white enrollment. In other words, if two families borrowed the same amount and had repayment patterns that are typical for their college, then after ten years the parents of a child attending a top-fifty institution for Black enrollment owe twice as much as the parents of a child attending a top-fifty institution for white enrollment.

Figure 4

Even for smaller Parent PLUS loans, Black parents struggle significantly more to repay than do white parents. At ten years from the start of repayment, no institution in the top fifty for white students’ share of undergraduate enrollment sees parents of its attendees burdened by more than two-thirds of the principal remaining. By contrast, at this same point in time, parents of attendees at forty-six of the top fifty institutions for Black students’ share of undergraduate enrollment have at least two-thirds of the principal remaining, including fourteen schools where the average original principal was less than $10,000. (See Figure A1 in Appendix 1.)

These results display—in no uncertain terms—who has wealth and income in this country, and who doesn’t.

The College Scorecard also provides data on borrowers’ default and repayment status (“borrower-based repayment rates”). The data only span borrowers’ statuses a few years into repayment, yet they suggest heavily that Black families comprise an outsized share of families falling into delinquency and default, unable to pay down their balances.

For 1,920 institutions, the College Scorecard provides data on the percentage of Parent PLUS borrowers making progress on their loans after three years, which means the families are successfully paying down the principal amount. Sixty-eight institutions show 10 percent of parents or fewer making progress after three years; fifty-nine of them are HBCUs.55

Among institutions with sufficient data in the College Scorecard, the median Parent PLUS default rate three years after borrowers enter repayment is 7 percent, but there is wide variation by college. Default rates can be high even within just a few years of entering repayment, and nowhere is this more true than at HBCUs. At Miles College, Lane College, and Philander Smith College, within two years of the start of repayment more than 20 percent of Parent PLUS borrowers are in default, exceeding 30 percent by the third year.56  HBCUs make up 29 of the 76 institutions where, within three years of the start of repayment, more than 20 percent of families default on their Parent PLUS loan.

Taken together, these results heavily suggest that Parent PLUS loan repayment is a far more significant burden for Black families than for white families relative to their means.

In addition, the College Scorecard offers data on repayment statuses for some subgroups of students. These data show that two factors play key roles in parents’ default rates: whether the child completed their program and whether the family also received the Pell Grant. At the three-year mark, more than twice as many Parent PLUS-borrower parents of non-completers are in default (9.7 percent) as the Parent PLUS-borrower parents of completers (an estimated 4.8 percent).57 And at the three-year mark, nearly three times more than twice as many of the Parent PLUS-borrower parents of Pell recipients (an estimated 9.3 percent) had defaulted on their Parent PLUS loans as the Parent PLUS-borrower parents of students who did not receive the Pell Grant (an estimated 3.3 percent).58

Inside the Lives of Parent-Borrowers

Parents do not take on Parent PLUS loans in a vacuum; these loans are one factor among many that compounds with the racial wealth gap and forces parents to choose between paying their monthly bills, retiring when they want to, purchasing a home, and putting food on the table. Prior research has found that nearly 40 percent of older borrowers, most of whom owe for their children’s education, even go so far as to skip meeting their own health care needs, compared to 25 percent of non-borrowers their age.59 If we are to understand how the Parent PLUS program impacts different families differently, we must understand parents’ financial circumstances.

Other than when parents complete applications for financial aid, their information is not often surveyed by the U.S. Department of Education, making in-depth data on parent-borrowers scarce. One place to find such data is the Survey of Household Economics and Decisionmaking, an annual survey conducted by the Federal Reserve. The survey asks households whether they hold student loans for a child’s education, which can include private loans; Parent PLUS borrowers likely comprise a large majority of this sample.60

The data paint a stark study in contrasts: along numerous dimensions, Black and Latino/a parent-borrowers face greater barriers to financial wellbeing, and thus greater barriers to repayment, than do white parent-borrowers.61 (For the full set of results, see Appendix 2.)

  • Income:62 The median white parent who holds these loans earns more than $100,000 a year combined with their spouse or partner, versus $50,000 to $75,000 for Black parent-borrowers and $75,000 to $100,000 for Latino/a parent-borrowers. Around 35 percent of the Black and Latino/a parents who hold these loans earn under $50,000, combined with their spouse or partner, which is double the rate for white parents who hold these loans (17 percent). (See Figure 5; note that these calculations exclude households where the respondent is a retiree.)
  • Savings:63 Half of white parents who hold these loans have household savings and investments exceeding $100,000. Only a quarter of Black and Latino/a parents with these loans have that much in household savings and investments.
  • Home ownership:64 Among those with student loans for a child’s education, 90 percent of white parents own a home, compared to 69 percent of Black parents and 82 percent of Latino/a parents.
  • Educational attainment:65 More than half of Latino/a parents who hold these loans have only a high school diploma or lower level of education. About one-third of Black parents who hold these loans have only a high school diploma or lower level of education, and one-quarter of white parents who hold these loans have a high school diploma or lower level of education.
  • Debt for their own education:66 Many more Black parents (33 percent) and Latino/a parents (29 percent) who hold these loans for their children’s education also hold student loans or other debt for their own education, compared to white parents (13 percent) who hold these loans.
  • Other high-interest debt for education:67 Among parent-borrowers with student loans for a child’s education, high-interest credit card debt is more frequently a component of overall education debt for Latino/a parents (25 percent) and Black parents (17 percent) than white parents (11 percent).
  • Repayment ability:68 37 percent of Black parents say they expect to be unable to make a partial payment on their student loan bills in the month they are surveyed, compared to roughly 20 percent for all other groups.
  • Financial security:69 When respondents are asked if they could get by without their primary income for three months, more than one-half of white parents with these loans said “yes” compared to around 36 percent of Black and Latino/a parents with these loans.
Figure 5

These results help us understand why repayment is so low: Parent PLUS loans compound disparities in income, education, assets, other debt, and more. The parents of students with considerable unmet need who borrow to fund their child’s education are also the ones likely to face numerous barriers to repayment.

There are also financial challenges not captured in the survey data analyzed above. In particular, Black workers experience well-documented discrimination in the employment market, which has a downward impact on income and savings.70 Moreover, Black college graduates are more often relied upon by immediate and extended family for assistance meeting basic needs,71 which means that even for Black parent-borrowers who went to college themselves, the limited resources they need to pay their monthly Parent PLUS bills are pulled from all directions. And the same is likely true of many who do not have the benefit of a degree.

The Worst Outcomes of All: Social Security Offsets

When a student loan borrower defaults on their loan, they may have their income withheld from them in the form of wage garnishment and tax refund withholding.72 This applies to Social Security payments as well, and in 2015, the Department of Education collected $171 million in student loan payments through offsets to Social Security.73 Although this does not affect most younger borrowers, Parent PLUS borrowers comprise an outsized share of those who are subject to this offsetting. Whereas Parent PLUS makes up about one in fourteen of all outstanding federal student loans,74 the Government Accountability Office (GAO) reports that one in three of the retirement-aged borrowers whose Social Security payments are offset had a Parent PLUS loan at some point in time.75

This is not a case of borrowers simply forgetting to pay their monthly bill: five years after the offset, one-third of older borrowers were still in default.76 For more than half of those subject to the offset who were over aged 50, none of the offset was applied to the principal, meaning that after retirees or disabled people had their Social Security income reduced, their debt burdens still did not decrease.77

In essence, the offset is a ghastly, counterproductive way for one government agency (the Social Security Administration) to pay the interest on debt held by another (the U.S. Department of Education)—something that seems not only a waste of resources but also counter to both agencies’ missions.

The Government Accountability Office’s research on these borrowers subject to offset, all of whom are either retired or disabled, is a window into both the harsh consequences of student loan default among older borrowers and their difficulty to repay their loans.78 According to the GAO’s data, of borrowers whose Social Security payments were offset in 2015, 80 percent had held their student loans for at least ten years, 43 percent had held their student loans for at least twenty years, and 11 percent had held their loans for at least thirty years.79 This is to say that one in nine of those who saw their Social Security benefits offset in 2015 had held the loan since 1985, or even earlier.

One in nine of those who saw their Social Security benefits offset in 2015 had held the loan since 1985, or even earlier.

Increasingly, these offsets result in monthly Social Security payments that were reduced to amounts below the poverty guideline. Among student loan borrowers subject to the offset in 2004, 42 percent of monthly payments were less than the poverty guideline, and this increased to 69 percent by 2015.80

While disaggregation by race was not provided in the GAO’s report, inferring from the data on repayment presented above suggests that these borrowers subject to Social Security offset are likely disproportionately Black or Latino/a. Not only might a parent-borrower delay retirement to keep paying their student loan bills, but even after they do retire, they may have to live in poverty if they default and have no other income sources. While Parent PLUS loans are automatically forgiven when a borrower passes away, it is a disgrace that a parent might live out their last years in poverty because they wanted their child to get a college education.

How Did We Get Here?

Being a parent is, for many people, the most important thing they do in their lifetime. Some call it their vocation, their calling. Parents want their children to have a better life than they had, and even to achieve their dreams, which often includes attending college. And given how hard high school students work to get into these colleges—in one study, 49 percent of juniors at private high schools reported “a great deal of stress on a daily basis,” with preparing for college listed as a top reason why—81parents do not want anything to stand in their way, even the reality of what they can reasonably afford. And it remains true that the only thing more expensive than a college degree is not getting a college degree.82

Perhaps it is not surprising, then, that more than a million parents every year use Parent PLUS loans to stake their own financial future to provide for their children’s educational opportunities. But it is critical to examine why they would need to do this, and why this phenomenon seems to occur far more within communities of color.

The data presented in this report is precisely what should be expected to happen when these three things are true:

  1. Parents know their child will be at a disadvantage if they lack a college degree.
  2. These parents must cover an outsized share of costs as a result of disinvestment at the state and federal level, including reduced funding to public institutions and the decline of the Pell Grant’s purchasing power.
  3. As a product of our nation’s history and generations of policy, some families have significantly more resources than do others, correlated by race.

During the rise in use of Parent PLUS loans, the federal government, the colleges, and the parents were all making well-intentioned choices in the service of college opportunity. The federal government made the loans available at rates that were generally better than what parents could obtain through the private market. The colleges, for their part, informed the families of this program. And the parents took out the loans due to a desire to set their children up for success, whatever it would take.

But noble intentions can be beset by unforeseen circumstances. Parent PLUS has run headlong into a runaway train: state lawmakers’ decades-long campaign of disinvestment from public higher education. In 1980, when the Parent PLUS program was created, average tuition and fees at a public four-year college was $2,387 (in current dollars).83 Today, it stands more than four times higher, at $9,349, the result of state funding cuts made during recessions never being undone, one economic cycle after another.84

It is hardly a coincidence, then, that Parent PLUS borrowing at public four-year colleges is greatest in the states that provide the lowest levels of funding to four-year education. (See Figure 6.) Moreover, Parent PLUS itself may have created an implicit permission structure whereby states could shift the cost burden more to parents, knowing that there is a limitless stream of liquidity that can fill in the gaps. And a greater share of costs borne by families has a disproportionate impact on those with less income and wealth, making the intersection with the racial wealth gap so damaging.

Figure 6

Consider, as well, how economic forces have changed the prototypical American family. It used to be the case that, in most U.S. families, one spouse worked while the other was out of the workforce, raising their children. Parent PLUS makes the most sense for that dual-parent, one-income household, which can increase its income during the repayment period by having the second spouse enter the workforce when the proverbial nest is empty. Over the decades, however, that family has been disappearing. In 1980, when Parent PLUS was established, 47 percent of married two-parent families with children 18 or under had only one spouse in the workforce. In 2019, that figure was 30 percent.85

Unfortunately, parents’ determination to enroll their children at their desired college is not matched by a determination in Congress to enable such enrollment to be done affordably. When the Parent PLUS program was created, the Pell Grant’s share of the average costs of tuition, fees, room, and board at public four-year colleges had recently peaked at 79 percent; today, it has fallen to around 29 percent.86

By providing Parent PLUS at relatively high interest rates and fewer options to reduce monthly payments, it is as if the federal government is standing in the desert selling water bottles for $100 apiece. Tragically, willing customers are lined up for miles.

A Reckoning Over Parent PLUS Is Overdue

Higher education’s dependency on Parent PLUS cannot continue. If current trends persist, then members of the Millennial, Gen Z, and subsequent generations may spend their entire adult lives in student loan repayment, combined between their own student loans and those for their children.

In order to reduce harmful and counterproductive Social Security offsets, high rates of default among vulnerable families, and the continued worsening of the racial wealth gap, policymakers in Congress, the White House, and the Department of Education should confront the fact that the Parent PLUS program has become something far different from what it was conceived to be.

Parent PLUS Reform Should Be Accompanied by Additional Resources

Some have proposed reducing the number of families that can take out Parent PLUS loans through stricter assessments of a family’s ability to repay the loans.87 This is one of the most clear pathways to reducing Parent PLUS defaults, but it also means that low-income families, disproportionately Black families, may be driven to the private loan market instead, where loan terms will be even less favorable to families. Many of these families, especially those living in places without access to an affordable community college or public four-year education, would not enroll their children in college at all, due to their lack of financial resources.

Some of these reforms may be necessary, but if they are enacted, they should be accompanied by deliberate policy efforts to replace any lost Parent PLUS loan resources with grant aid. The concern over harmful impacts of any Parent PLUS reform is greatest at HBCUs, where an earlier reform—a change to how the Department of Education checks Parent PLUS borrowers’ credit histories in the early 2010s—threw HBCUs into a state of financial distress that the president of Hampton University called “the worst situation I’ve seen in 35 years.88 Should similar policy changes be undertaken in the future, a financial safety net must be in place for the institutions and families that have relied on Parent PLUS the most.

It is Vital That the Biden Administration Include Parent PLUS in Student Loan Forgiveness

Last week, White House sources informed The Washington Post that the Biden administration is finalizing plans for $10,000 per borrower in student loan debt forgiveness.89 This would mark the most significant relief for student loan borrowers in history, though at a budgetary cost over time, $230 billion according to one estimate.90 Facing political pressure to limit the budgetary impact of this executive action, the Biden administration may consider targeting this forgiveness to certain categories of borrowers, and the latest reporting indicates that the current plan features an income limit of $150,000 per person or $300,000 for a married couple filing jointly.

To this end, the administration may face pressure to exclude Parent PLUS from executive action on forgiveness, taking a “per student” approach rather than a “per borrower” approach. Some may argue that including Parent PLUS would mean one family can benefit twice as much from the executive action as another family simply because of how they distributed their loan burden between parent and child, which may have been an arbitrary decision. And, unfortunately, the administration may feel less pressure to include parent-borrowers because they are not who the body politic thinks of as struggling student loan borrowers.

But the administration should include Parent PLUS in executive action on forgiveness. The analysis presented in this report illustrates the difficulties parents face in repayment and how these increased loans likely resulted from reduced public funding for higher education. And we have seen how the racial wealth gap makes Parent PLUS repayment a profoundly different experience for Black and Latino/a parents versus white parents, and for low-wealth parents versus rich parents.

One-time cancellation of Parent PLUS debt may bring profound improvements to financial freedom for some parents, with impacts that last for twenty years or more. And the fact that income-based repayment (IBR) is unavailable to Parent PLUS borrowers makes it all the more likely that cancellation would newly provide low-income parent-borrowers a way out from having to make monthly payments, more so than for other low-income borrowers.

Determining the proper amount to forgive is outside the scope of this report. But the scale of the student debt problem is so large that some action must be taken while the political will exists. Even a smaller amount of forgiveness per borrower would be life-changing for many. For example, most of the student loan borrowers subject to Social Security offsets owed less than $10,000 at the time of the initial offset.91

Consider that the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) has found that the Parent PLUS program turns a profit for the federal government, and under one of the CBO’s two projection methodologies, it is the only federal student loan program expected to take in more money over the coming years than it gives out.92 This is to say that higher interest rates for Parent PLUS, combined with Parent PLUS borrowers’ inability to access IBR, have been helping to finance the federal subsidy provided by other undergraduate loans. Perhaps this ongoing redistribution of resources from parent-borrowers to other borrowers would be acceptable if all parent-borrowers were high-income and financially secure. But that is simply not what the data tell us.

These parents cannot be kept on the fringes of the policy debate. The cancellation of student debt, including and especially Parent PLUS loans, is one vital step toward correcting the ills of racial inequality in the United States and enabling many of these borrowers to regain their financial footing and once again become full participants in the economy. Parent PLUS must be included in debt cancellation.

A GitHub repository containing the data sets and R code used to produce the original analysis in this report can be found here.

Appendix 1

Table A1
Top Ten CIP (Classification of Instructional Programs) Codes by Share of Students Receiving Parent PLUS
Four-digit CIP code CIP Description Ratio of Parent PLUS Borrowers in 2017–18/2018–19 Cohort to Number of Graduates in 2017–18/2018–19
4706 Vehicle Maintenance and Repair Technologies (Certificate) 1.164
1105 Computer Systems Analysis (Bachelor’s degree) 0.854
1110 Computer/Information Technology Administration and Management (Certificate) 0.813
5204 Business Operations Support and Assistant Services (Certificate) 0.759
1109 Computer Systems Networking and Telecommunications (Associate’s degree) 0.733
4301 Criminal Justice and Corrections (Certificate) 0.709
1503 Electrical Engineering Technologies/Technicians (Bachelor’s degree) 0.696
2699 Biological and Biomedical Sciences, Other (Bachelor’s degree)  0.673
5106 Dental Support Services and Allied Professions (Certificate) 0.663
1205 Culinary Arts and Related Services (Bachelor’s degree) 0.616
N/A Median 4-digit CIP code 0.176
Source: Beginning Postsecondary Students Study: 2012/2017, table retrieval number #yfowbb.
table a2
Top Ten Institutions by Percentage of Undergraduates Receiving Parent PLUS
Institution Estimated Percentage of Undergraduates Receiving Parent PLUS  Average Earnings Ten Years after Graduation*
WyoTech 70–75% $49,400
Columbia College Hollywood 50–55% $39,500
Clark Atlanta University 50–55% $38,200
American Musical and Dramatic Academy 50–55% $34,500
The Modern College of Design 50–55% $31,800
Spelman College 45–50% $50,700
Ferrum College 40–45% $41,100
Hampton University 40–45% $50,100
New York Conservatory for Dramatic Arts 35–45% $35,600
Morehouse College 35–40% $49,000
Median U.S. institution  5–15% $47,000

* Only applies to those working and not enrolled.

Source: Author’s analysis of data from the College Scorecard. Minimum 500 existing Parent PLUS recipients as of the latest College Scorecard release.

table a3
Top Ten Institutions by Average Outstanding Parent PLUS Balance
Institution Average Outstanding Parent PLUS Balance  Average Earnings Ten Years after Graduation*
Spelman College $80,985 $50,700
Berklee College of Music $79,039 $38,300
New York University $77,694 $78,600
Savannah College of Art and Design $75,503 $41,400
Art Center College of Design $74,430 $62,300
Ringling College of Art and Design $73,918 $43,100
Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University-Prescott $70,777 $70,300
School of Visual Arts $68,927 $47,800
Rhode Island School of Design $68,411 $56,400
California Institute of the Arts $67,727 $50,600
Median U.S. institution  $23,973 $47,000
* Only applies to those working and not enrolled. 

Source: author’s analysis of data from the College Scorecard. Minimum 500 existing Parent PLUS recipients as of the latest College Scorecard release. 

 

table a4
Average Annual Salary in 2017 among Credential Earners Who First Started College in 2011–12 and Were Not Enrolled in 2017, by Field of Study
Field of Study Average Annual Salary, 2017
Personal and culinary services $23,885
Parks, recreation, and fitness studies $25,164
Public administration/social services $28,139
Psychology $28,651
Visual and performing arts $28,929
Health professions and related sciences $30,081
English language and literature/letters $30,594
Education $30,801
Liberal arts, sciences and humanities $31,930
Security and protective services $32,008
Natural resources and conservation $32,084
Biological and biomedical sciences $32,097
History $32,257
Family, consumer, and human sciences $34,269
Communication and journalism $35,434
Legal professions and studies $36,436
Multi/interdisciplinary studies $36,693
Agriculture and related sciences $36,837
Physical sciences $36,910
Communications technologies/technicians $37,376
Undecided or Undeclared $37,391
Mechanic and repair technologies $37,576
Transportation and materials moving $38,394
Precision production $39,332
Political science and government $40,811
Business, management, and marketing $43,098
Mathematics and statistics $43,561
Engineering technologies/technicians $44,619
Construction trades $46,701
Economics $49,890
Computer and information sciences $50,282
Engineering $55,503
Average salary $35,773
Source: Beginning Postsecondary Students Study: 2012/2017, table retrieval number #yfowbb.
figure a1

Download Appendix 2 by clicking here.

Notes

  1. The Federal Student Aid Data Center reports that the total outstanding federal student loan balance is $1.6064 trillion as of December 31, 2021. See their “Federal Student Loan Portfolio Summary,https://studentaid.gov/data-center/student/portfolio.
  2. Tyler Pager, Danielle Douglas-Gabriel, and Jeff Stein, “Latest White House plan would forgive $10,000 in student debt per borrower,” Washington Post, May 27, 2022, https://www.washingtonpost.com/us-policy/2022/05/27/biden-student-debt-borrower/.
  3. Author’s calculations using College Scorecard data, accessed March 2022.
  4. In the 2017–18 academic year, the average (without zeros) Parent PLUS disbursement was $15,116, compared to an average (without zeros) of $6,616 for direct subsidized and unsubsidized loans. (Author’s analysis of data from the National Postsecondary Student Aid Study: Administrative Sample, accessed April 19, 2022 via https://nces.ed.gov/datalab, table retrieval number #phdfwq.)
  5. Author’s calculation using College Scorecard data, accessed March 2022.
  6. See tables 5, 6, and 7 in “Social Security Offsets: Improvements to Program Design Could Better Assist Older Student Loan Borrowers with Obtaining Permitted Relief,” Government Accountability Office, 2016, https://www.gao.gov/products/gao-17-45
  7. This statistic includes some parents who hold private student loans for their children’s education.
  8. This statistic includes some parents who hold private student loans for their children’s education.
  9. For example, Rachel Fishman of New America recommends that an ability-to-pay measure should be included in the criteria for Parent PLUS eligibility, and Sandy Baum and colleagues similarly recommend that Parent PLUS be capped at a family’s EFC. See Rachel Fishman, “The Wealth Gap PLUS Debt: How Federal Loans Exacerbate Inequality for Black Families,” New America, last updated on May 15, 2018, and Sandy Baum, Kristin Blagg, and Rachel Fishman, “Reshaping Parent PLUS Loans: Recommendations for Reforming the Parent PLUS Program,” Urban Institute, April 2019 (updated April 30, 2019), https://vtechworks.lib.vt.edu/bitstream/handle/10919/92646/ReshapingParentPLUSLoans.pdf.
  10. Author’s analysis of data from the Federal Student Aid Data Center.
  11. Ibid.
  12. The term “financial aid” refers to both grants and loans. The source is the author’s analysis of data from the Federal Student Aid Data Center and IPEDS. In 2019–20, Parent PLUS comprised a majority of financial aid at Lincoln College of Technology-Indianapolis (66 percent), California Aeronautical University (63 percent), Universal Technical Institute of Arizona Inc (55 percent), West Coast University-Los Angeles (52 percent), and Universal Technical Institute of Texas Inc. (52 percent). At two private, nonprofit HBCUs, Parent PLUS comprises nearly half of financial aid—Spelman College (49 percent) and Hampton University (46 percent).
  13. Author’s analysis of data from the College Scorecard. These universities are Penn State ($1.39 billion), NYU ($1.13 billion), Arizona State ($884 milion), the University of Alabama ($676 million), St. John’s University–New York ($622 million), Savannah College of Art and Design ($617 million), Michigan State ($582 million), Full Sail University ($581 million), the University of Illinois Urbana–Champaign ($567 million), and the University of Texas–Austin ($550 million).
  14. As reported in the College Scorecard, accessed March 2022, via the variables “PPLUS_PCT_LOW” and “PPLUS_PCT_HIGH.”
  15. See figure 2 in Ross A. Riskin, “The Minuses of PLUS Loans,” Financial Planning Association, 2021, https://www.financialplanningassociation.org/article/journal/MAR21-minuses-plus-loans.
  16. See page 2 Sandy Baum, Kristin Blagg, and Rachel Fishman, “Reshaping Parent PLUS Loans: Recommendations for Reforming the Parent PLUS Program,” Urban Institute, April 2019 (updated April 30, 2019), https://vtechworks.lib.vt.edu/bitstream/handle/10919/92646/ReshapingParentPLUSLoans.pdf.
  17. One borrower quoted in The Wall Street Journal was approved in three minutes: see Josh Mitchell, “The U.S. makes it easy for parents to get college loans—repaying them is another story,” Wall Street Journal, 2017, http://opportunityamericaonline.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/04/THE-U.S.-MAKES-IT-EASY-FOR-PARENTS-TO-GET-COLLEGE-LOANS%E2%80%94REPAYING-THEM-IS-ANOTHER-STORY.pdf
  18. “Parent PLUS Loans,” Office of Federal Student Aid, n.d., accessed April 21, 2022, https://studentaid.gov/understand-aid/types/loans/plus/parent.
  19. According to the Government Accountability Office, about 67,300 Americans received Social Security benefits below the poverty guideline in 2015, either partially or fully due to defaulting on a student loan such as Parent PLUS. See Figure 9 in “Social Security Offsets: Improvements to Program Design Could Better Assist Older Student Loan Borrowers with Obtaining Permitted Relief,” Government Accountability Office, December 2016, https://www.gao.gov/assets/gao-17-45.pdf.
  20. Conference report on H.R. 5192, to amend and extend the Higher Education Act of 1965. See the Congressional Record entry for August 25, 1980, https://www.congress.gov/bound-congressional-record/1980/08/25/house-section, page 22,946.
  21. Quotations from Dr. Howard Swearer, president of Brown University, and Dr. Karl Kaysen, vice chairman and director of research of the Sloan Commission on Government and Higher Education. See Hearings Before the Subcommittee on Education, Arts, and the Humanities of the Committee on Labor and Human Resources: First Session on S. 1839, U.S. Senate, 1979, accessed via Google Books and the University of Michigan Libraries, https://play.google.com/store/books/details?id=CKLRAAAAMAAJ&rdid=book-CKLRAAAAMAAJ&rdot=1.
  22. For example, since 1989–90, the percentage of undergraduates who identify as a race other than white non-Hispanic has risen from 24.1 percent to 47.4 percent; the percentage of undergraduates whose family income is under the poverty line has risen from 16.2 percent to 25.9 percent; and the average public four-year undergraduate tuition payment after grants, in 2022 real dollars, increased from $2,670 to $6,045. (Author’s analysis of data from the National Postsecondary Student Aid Study, accessed April 2022. Inflation adjustments made using CPI.)
  23. Author’s analysis of College Scorecard data on cohorts of students who received Parent PLUS in the 2018–19 and 2019–20 award years. These statistics are derived from the subset of institutions for which there is sufficient data, which includes 1,826 institutions.
  24. Author’s analysis of data from the Federal Student Aid Data Center.
  25. Parent PLUS loans originated in 2020–21 have an interest rate of 5.30 percent, almost double the 2.75 percent interest rate of undergraduate Stafford loans. See figure 2 in Ross A. Riskin, “The Minuses of PLUS Loans,” Financial Planning Association, 2021, https://www.financialplanningassociation.org/article/journal/MAR21-minuses-plus-loans.
  26. Author’s analysis of data from the Baccalaureate and Beyond Study, table retrieval number #rlpvam.
  27. Rachel Fishman, “The wealth gap PLUS debt,” New America Foundation, 2018, https://www.newamerica.org/education-policy/reports/wealth-gap-plus-debt/.
  28. Author’s analysis of data from the Survey of Household and Economic Decisionmaking. See Appendix 2 and the section of this report titled “Inside the Lives of Parent-Borrowers” for more details.
  29. Author’s analysis of data from the National Postsecondary Student Aid Study.
  30. Ibid.
  31. Denise A. Smith, “Achieving Financial Equity and Justice for HBCUs,” September 14, 2021, https://tcf.org/content/report/achieving-financial-equity-justice-hbcus/.
  32. Author’s analysis of data from the College Scorecard, accessed April 10, 2022.
  33. This list is Howard University, Clark Atlanta University, Morehouse College, Spelman College, Hampton University, and—the non-HBCU—the American Musical and Dramatic Academy.
  34. Kimberly Jin and Sruthi Darbhamulla, “HBCU, black parents saddled with risky college student debt because of Parent PLUS Loan,” USA Today, 2019, https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/education/2019/10/27/hbcu-black-college-parent-plus-loan-student-debt/3977997002/.
  35. Kriston McIntosh, Emily Moss, Ryan Nunn, and Jay Shambaugh, “Examining the Black-white wealth gap,” The Brookings Institution, February 2020, https://www.brookings.edu/blog/up-front/2020/02/27/examining-the-black-white-wealth-gap/.
  36. Author’s analysis of data from the Baccalaureate and Beyond Study, table retrieval number #gpvgli.
  37. Author’s analysis of data from the Baccalaureate and Beyond Study, table retrieval number #icjulk.
  38. Rachel Fishman, “The wealth gap PLUS debt,” New America Foundation, 2018, https://www.newamerica.org/education-policy/reports/wealth-gap-plus-debt/.
  39. Ibid.
  40. Data source is author’s analysis of data from the Federal Student Aid Data Center. For more information about the check, see Dianne Hayes, “Obama Administration Plans Changes to Parent PLUS Loans,” Diverse Issues in Higher Education, August 2013, https://www.diverseeducation.com/demographics/african-american/article/15093542/obama-administration-plans-changes-to-parent-plus-loans.
  41. “Parent PLUS loans,” Office of Federal Student Aid, n.d., https://studentaid.gov/understand-aid/types/loans/plus/parent#adverse-credit.
  42. Source: author’s analysis of data from NPSAS:16, table retrieval number #uewtwv.
  43. Source: author’s analysis of data from NPSAS:18-AC, table retrieval number #jkaafa.
  44. Ibid.
  45. For context, 14.3 percent of bachelor’s degree earners in 2008 had a parent take out a Parent PLUS loan at some point along the way, including 15.0 percent among white graduates, 15.5 percent among Black graduates, 10.9 percent among Latino/a graduates, 10.2 percent among Asian/Pacific Islander graduates, and 12.5 percent among others. The source is author’s analysis of Baccalaureate and Beyond (2008/18) data, table retrieval number #ldggqy.
  46. Author’s analysis of Baccalaureate and Beyond (2008/18) survey data. Only those who were in the workforce at the time of the 2018 interview were included.
  47. Author’s analysis of data from the College Scorecard. For context, about 19 percent of undergraduate awards in culinary arts go to Black students, and about 28 percent go to Hispanic students. (Author’s analysis of IPEDS data.)
  48. Ibid.
  49. Ibid.
  50. Author’s analysis of data from the Beginning Postsecondary Students: 2011–12 study, table retrieval number #yfowbb.
  51. Researchers at Brandeis University found that, for undergraduate students generally, 94 percent of white students’ debt is paid off twenty years after starting college versus just 5 percent of Black students’ debt. However, the data sources used for this research don’t enable the same analysis for Parent PLUS. See Laura Sullivan, Tatjana Meschede, Thomas Shapiro, and Fernanda Escobar, “Stalling Dreams: How Student Debt is Disrupting Life Chances and Widening the Racial Wealth Gap,” Institute on Assets and Social Policy, September 2019, https://heller.brandeis.edu/iere/pdfs/racial-wealth-equity/racial-wealth-gap/stallingdreams-how-student-debt-is-disrupting-lifechances.pdf.
  52. Marian Wang, Beckie Supiano, and Andrea Fuller, “The parent loan trap,” Chronicle of Higher Education, October 4, 2012, https://www.chronicle.com/article/the-parent-loan-trap/.
  53. Sandy Baum, Kristin Blagg, and Rachel Fishman, “Reshaping parent PLUS loans: Recommendations for reforming the parent PLUS program,” Urban Institute, 2019, https://vtechworks.lib.vt.edu/bitstream/handle/10919/92646/ReshapingParentPLUSLoans.pdf.
  54. The years 1, 4, 5, and 10 are the ones for which data is provided by the College Scorecard. The College Scorecard also provides repayment data for twenty years from the start of repayment, but since we have noted previously in this report that borrowing patterns have changed over the past fifteen years, we focus this analysis on years 1 through 10.
  55. Author’s analysis of data from the College Scorecard. From left to right in Figure A2, the seven schools in this set with more than 50 percent Black undergraduate enrollment are The Art Institute of Atlanta, Howard University, North Carolina Central University, North Carolina A&T State University, Florida A&M University, Clark Atlanta University, and Hampton University. Six of these seven are HBCUs.
  56. Ibid.
  57. Ibid.
  58. Ibid.
  59. “Snapshot of older consumers and student loan debt,” Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, January 2017, https://files.consumerfinance.gov/f/documents/201701_cfpb_OA-Student-Loan-Snapshot.pdf.
  60. Our SHED analysis estimates that there are 10.2 million U.S. parents who hold student loans for a child’s or grandchild’s education, be it from a federal student loan or a private loan. The Federal Student Aid Data Center shows that there are 3.7 million Parent PLUS recipients, which refers to the number of students who received the loan, not the parent(s). If we make a conservative estimate that at least 75 percent of Parent PLUS loans are borrower jointly by a pair of parents, then that means there are at least 6.5 million parents in the U.S. who hold a Parent PLUS loan either as the sole borrower, as a co-borrower, or as a cosigner. This comprises a majority of the 10.2 million who hold student loan debt for a child’s or grandchild’s education.
  61. All stats are from the author’s analysis of data from the Survey of Household Economics and Decisionmaking annual releases, 2017 to 2020.
  62. The survey question asked is, “Which of the following categories best describes the total income that you (and your spouse/partner) received from all sources, before taxes and deductions, in the past 12 months?”
  63. The survey question asked is, “What is the approximate total amount of your household’s savings and investments?”
  64. The survey question asked is, “Do you (1) own your home with a mortgage or loan, (2) own your home free and clear (without a mortgage or loan), (3) pay rent, or (4) neither own nor pay rent?”
  65. The survey question asked is, “What is the highest level of school you have completed or the highest degree you have received?”
  66. The survey question asked is, “Do you currently have student loan debt or owe any money used to pay for your own education?”
  67. The survey question asked is, “Is the money you owe for your child or grandchild’s education a credit card?”
  68. The survey question asked is, “Are you expecting to be unable to pay or only make a partial payment on each of the following bills this month? [Student loan]”
  69. The survey question asked is, “If you were to lose your main source of income (e.g. job, government benefits), could you cover your expenses for 3 months by borrowing money, using savings, selling assets, or borrowing from friends/family?”
  70. For one summary of this issue, see Valerie Wilson, “The costs of racial and ethnic labor market discrimination and solutions that can contribute to closing employment and wage gaps,” Economic Policy Institute, January 2022, https://www.epi.org/publication/wilson-testimony-costs-of-racial-and-ethnic-labor-market-discrimination/.
  71. Ray Boshara, “For blacks, college is not an equalizer,” Chicago Tribune, April 2017, https://www.chicagotribune.com/opinion/commentary/ct-black-college-graduates-lost-wealth-20170416-story.html.
  72. “Collections on Defaulted Loans,” U.S. Department of Education Office of Federal Student Aid, n.d., https://studentaid.gov/manage-loans/default/collections.
  73. “Social Security Offsets: Improvements to Program Design Could Better Assist Older Student Loan Borrowers with Obtaining Permitted Relief,” Government Accountability Office, 2016, https://www.gao.gov/products/gao-17-45.
  74. According to the latest data from the Federal Student Aid Data Center, there are 52.3 million outstanding federal student loans, of which 3.7 million are Parent PLUS. See “Federal Student Loan Portfolio,” https://studentaid.gov/data-center/student/portfolio.
  75. See page 13, “Social Security Offsets: Improvements to Program Design Could Better Assist Older Student Loan Borrowers with Obtaining Permitted Relief,” Government Accountability Office, 2016, https://www.gao.gov/products/gao-17-45.
  76. Ibid. See “What GAO Found” summary.
  77. Ibid. See page 19.
  78. Ibid. See page 12.
  79. Ibid.
  80. Ibid. Calculated using tables 17, 18, and 19.
  81. “NYU Study Examines Top High School Students’ Stress and Coping Mechanisms,” New York University, August 2015, https://www.nyu.edu/about/news-publications/news/2015/august/nyu-study-examines-top-high-school-students-stress-and-coping-mechanisms.html.
  82. Jillian Berman, “What’s more expensive than a college education? Not having one,” MarketWatch, May 2017, https://www.marketwatch.com/story/workers-are-more-likely-to-be-college-educated-for-the-first-time-ever-2016-06-30.
  83. NCES Digest of Education Statistics, Table 330.10, National Center on Education Statistics, n.d., https://nces.ed.gov/programs/digest/d20/tables/dt20_330.10.asp.
  84. Ibid.
  85. Author’s analysis of Panel Study of Income Dynamics (PSID) data. A Pew Research Center analysis (2015) showed similar declines over the past several decades using the Current Population Survey. See Kim Parker, Juliana Menasce Horowitz, and Molly Rohal, “Rising Kids and Running a Household: How Working Parents Share the Load,” Pew Research Center, November 2015, https://www.pewresearch.org/social-trends/2015/11/04/raising-kids-and-running-a-household-how-working-parents-share-the-load/.
  86. Spiros Protopsaltis and Sharon Parrott, “Pell Grants—a Key Tool for Expanding College Access and Economic Opportunity—Need Strengthening, Not Cuts,” The Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, July 2017, https://www.cbpp.org/research/federal-budget/pell-grants-a-key-tool-for-expanding-college-access-and-economic.
  87. See, for example, the proposal to limit Parent PLUS eligibility based on an ability-to-pay measure, as proposed by Rachel Fishman in “The wealth gap PLUS debt,” New America Foundation, 2018, https://www.newamerica.org/education-policy/reports/wealth-gap-plus-debt/.
  88. Dianne Hayes, “Obama Administration Plans Changes to Parent PLUS Loans,” Diverse Issues in Higher Education, August 2013, https://www.diverseeducation.com/demographics/african-american/article/15093542/obama-administration-plans-changes-to-parent-plus-loans.
  89. Tyler Pager, Danielle Douglas-Gabriel, and Jeff Stein, “Latest White House plan would forgive $10,000 in student debt per borrower,” Washington Post, May 27, 2022, https://www.washingtonpost.com/us-policy/2022/05/27/biden-student-debt-borrower/.
  90. Ibid.
  91. See tables 9 through 12 in “Social Security Offsets: Improvements to Program Design Could Better Assist Older Student Loan Borrowers with Obtaining Permitted Relief,” Government Accountability Office, 2016, https://www.gao.gov/products/gao-17-45.
  92. “Student Loan Programs—CBO’s May 2019 Baseline,” Congressional Budget Office, n.d., https://www.cbo.gov/system/files/2019-05/51310-2019-05-studentloan.pdf.