Obama visit to spotlight Iowa’s high student debt
Topics: From the Wires, News
FILE - In this March 21, 2012, file photo University of Dubuque student and adjunct instructor Jennifer Hogue takes a break before class on campus in Dubuque, Iowa. President Obamas visit to Iowa on April 25th to talk about college affordability is drawing attention to a surprising fact about a state known for education and frugality: its college students graduate with some of the nations highest debt burdens. (AP Photo/Telegraph Herald, Jessica Reilly, File) MAGS OUT; TV OUT(Credit: AP)IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) — President Barack Obama’s visit to Iowa to talk about college costs is drawing attention to a surprising fact about a state known for education and frugality: its college students graduate with some of the highest debt in the nation.
Nearly three-fourths of graduates of Iowa’s four-year public and private, non-profit universities left school with debt in 2010. They owed nearly $30,000 on average, the third highest debt load in the nation, according to the Project on Student Debt, a national group.
The massive amount of student borrowing flies in the face of the state’s thrifty culture. State and local governments in Iowa, for instance, carry some of the smallest debts in the nation, and the cost of living in the Hawkeye state is relatively cheap. Tuition rates have spiked in the past 15 years as state funding for public universities shrank, but they remain below the national average.
Policymakers point to a variety of reasons for the problem, including a shortage of state grants and scholarships, household income that is below the national average and has not kept up with tuition increases, more students attending costlier private schools, and policies that have encouraged borrowing from private lenders.
“We talk to students daily who have gotten in over their heads,” said Heather Doe, a spokeswoman for the Iowa College Student Aid Commission, which oversees the state financial aid programs that do exist.
Morgan Scherpelz, a 20-year-old University of Iowa sophomore from Fox River Grove, Ill., says she is better off than some students after earning merit scholarships that offset part of her out-of-state tuition. But she still expects to graduate with $30,000 in loans and then she’ll borrow more for a graduate degree in speech pathology.
“I’m just going to be digging myself out of this gigantic money pit, while figuring out how to pay for my kids’ education,” Scherpelz said. “I’ll be starting a life while trying to pay off a debt that I feel should have been gone long ago.”
When Obama appears at the University of Iowa Field House on Wednesday afternoon, he’s expected to call on Congress to prevent the interest rate on a popular federal loan program from doubling. His message is sure to resonate with young voters as he seeks re-election. Supporters lined up Monday morning hours before the university started giving away tickets to the event, which is expected to draw thousands.




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