A recent survey by Gallup showed that 50 percent of black college graduates held more than $25,000 in student loan debt, compared to 34 percent of white graduates—almost a 20-percentage point difference that indicates the growing debt gap among different races.
Most State University of New York (SUNY) schools cost over $20,000 in total annual costs for in-state students, and private schools like Sarah Lawrence College can cost upwards of $60,000 yearly.
Many students are taking out over $25,000 in loans, leading them to spend the bulk of their early career paying off those loans, according to the poll.
From the Africana Studies department, Assistant Professor of Literature Tracey Walters gave some insight on why the gap is so large for black students.
“Fewer families of color have access to wealth,” she said.
It is tougher for those families to establish a college fund for their children to have a head start at paying tuition, Walters said. A number of other factors, both cultural and economic, also affect this debt gap.
There has been a recent spike in the number of women of color earning degrees, which is incredible, but also driving up the debt rate, Walters said. Another factor to consider is that if students who are already receiving financial aid are taking out extra loans, it makes sense that they are graduating with extra debt.
Walters explained that nowadays, a college education is pushed on youth more than it previously was.
“Before it was that if you couldn’t afford it, you didn’t go. Now, you just take out a loan,” she said.
It has become much easier not only to go to college, but to also acquire debt in the process, Walters said. When asked about what the future may hold, Walters mentioned that she thought the gap would decrease, “but only because less people will be attending college…Those who have debt will most likely carry it with them.”
Sociology professor Boris Stremlin offered his views on the subject, explaining that as distressing as the gap is, it is not unexplained.
“There has always been an income gap between blacks and whites,” he said.
Stremlin said this gap in income has lead to the larger gap in student debt. Many families do not have the income to support a four-year education; loans need to be taken out, but for all four years rather than just a portion of the student’s college career. Stremlin explained that the majority of white students have a college fund, trust fund, inheritance, etc. set up so that they are not taking out loans for the entirety of their four years.
The Gallup survey showed that debt for black graduates has increased significantly since the ‘80s to now, from 63 percent to 78 percent, respectively.
Stremlin said this is a noticeable jump but may not be due purely to race; the number of people pursuing higher education has been rising significantly since the ‘80s, so debt has been increasing across the board.
Stremlin said this debt gap has evoked important questions like, “Does college as an investment pay off for minorities?” and “What sort of movement could this start?” He also said that with more and more students paying for higher education and graduating without jobs, it will fuel an anger and frustration, not only in black students but all students.
“With social frustrations building up, cross racial movements like Occupy Wall Street may become more and more prominent,” Stremlin said.
The cost that we take away from higher education is an incredibly common issue, but hits some harder than others. Stremlin suggested that some may lean towards increasing Pell Grants as a step forward. Stremlin also explained that on the other side of the spectrum people may take a more radical approach like abolishing tuition altogether, as Germany recently has done.