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Supreme Court block of Biden student loan plan may spur enrollment dip


Supreme Court blocks President Biden's plan to cancel $430 billion in student loan debt

The U.S. Supreme Court struck down President Joe Biden’s student loan forgiveness plan Friday, yet college affordability will remain an issue for years to come, experts say, causing more students to opt out altogether.

Given the Supreme Court’s ruling against affirmative action admission policies as well, “it’s very appropriate for us to be concerned,” said Kelly Slay, assistant professor of higher education and public policy at Vanderbilt University. “Instead of broadening opportunities, we’re adding barriers.”

Michele Shepard, senior director of college affordability at The Institute for College Access & Success, added that “this debt-financed system is unsustainable.”

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“We continue to be concerned that the high cost of college — including not only tuition costs but housing, food, transportation and other living costs — is giving students second thoughts about enrolling,” she said.

College is only getting more expensive

Typically, seven in 10 college seniors graduate in the red, owing an average of nearly $30,000 per borrower, according to the most recent data from The Institute for College Access & Success.

This year’s incoming freshman class will rely on loans even more in pursuit of a degree at a public college or university, a recent report shows.

A 2023 high-school graduate could take on as much as $37,300, on average, in student debt to earn a bachelor’s degree, according to a NerdWallet analysis of data from the National Center for Education Statistics.

The share of parents taking out federal parent PLUS loans to help cover the costs of their children’s college education has also grown, NerdWallet found.

A wave of students may opt out of college

Between the high cost of college and student loan burden, students are increasingly questioning the value of a four-year degree.

“I started looking for a path that would be the cheapest and cause the least amount of debt,” said Parker O’Neill, 18, who will start a two-year dental assisting program this fall at Century College, a community and technical college in White Bear Lake, Minnesota. Watching his mom struggle with her own debt repayment was the determining factor, he said.

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