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Paying for College Gets More Challenging For Families

Published 22 October 08 05:42 PM | Student Loan Girl 

Paying for college definitely isn’t getting any easier.

“It just seems like it’s really hard, because it is,” says Diana Jacobs, a mother of twin, college seniors, whose husband recently lost his job, forcing the family to go from borrowing modestly to maxing out their student loan amounts (“In Downturn Families Strain to Pay Tuition,” The New York Times, Oct. 16, 2008).

To meet her sons’ college expenses this year, Jacobs pressured the twins’ schools to increase their financial aid offers — each school offered $3,000 more in aid. And for the first time, Jacobs told her sons that she wouldn’t be able to assume their student loan debt, leaving the twins to take out their college loans in their own names.

“We all came to that consensus, but I hate it,” Jacobs said. “I hate for them to come out of school with $20,000 in student loans.”

The Jacobs family is not alone. The current economic conditions have made it even more difficult for families to afford the continually rising cost of college: unemployment is rampant, the cost of living is increasing, and home values are declining, making it more difficult for families to get home equity loans to help fund college expenses.


Slow Economy Causing Widespread Financial Challenges

Economic times have become so challenging that a recent survey of nearly 3,000 parents found that 62 percent of families plan to use student loans to help pay for college expenses this year, up from 53 percent just a year ago, according to Fidelity Investments’ College Savings Indicator.

The survey also revealed that parents may meet only 21 percent of the total cost of their children’s college education this year, down from 24 percent last year.

Families’ financial challenges have led to a 10-percent increase in financial aid applications this year. Aid administrators are concerned that this increased demand for federal financial aid — from 12.3 million applications last year to 13.5 million this year — may be too much for the government and schools to handle, now that more than 100 private, third-party lenders, citing reduced profit margins and increased difficulty finding investors, have left the federal student loan program.

Making the federal financial aid problem worse, states are facing widespread budget shortages and cutting back on the financial aid funding they give to colleges and universities, and schools’ own financial aid funds are dwindling due to disappointing returns on their endowments.

The economic downturn has also forced private student loan lenders who offer credit-based private student loans, which help families fill the gap between federal financial aid and the total cost of attendance, to rapidly adapt to changes in the credit markets. In recent months, these lenders, to avoid having borrowers default on their loans, have tightened their credit criteria, causing students who had previously borrowed on their own to need cosigners this year.



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