New Data Show Recent Graduates Who Received Pell Grants Left School with $6 Billion More in Debt than Their Peers

By: Nancy Wong

The Department of Education recently released new data for the College Scorecard, a critical consumer tool that provides vital college- and program-level data on college outcomes that are available for download. With this year’s release, the Department refreshed the Scorecard’s data, including college costs, student debt, graduation rates, and student body demographics, and they added the following new data elements:

  1. Median and average debt of students with federal student loans by Pell Grant status and sex
  2. Median earnings two years after completion
  3. Median and average Parent Plus loan debt, also disaggregated by Pell Grant status and sex
  4. Graduates earning more than 150% of the Federal Poverty Line

Of the new data elements, we spotlight median debt by Pell Grant status, which can shed light on college affordability for low-income students. Most students who graduate with debt are from low-income backgrounds — national data show that over 7 in 10 of graduates (73%) with any federal loans also received a Pell grant, and that Pell graduates have about $4,500 more in debt than other graduates.[1] However, data showing differences in debt loads between Pell and non-Pell graduates has not been available by college or program until this release. These data indicate that debt disparities for students who progressed through the same education and graduated with the same degree are very common, and quite sizeable.

Pell Students Graduate with Higher Median Debt than Higher-Income Peers

Looking at median debt from College Scorecard, Pell graduates also have higher debt burdens than non-Pell graduates across credentials and when compared within the same program.[2] In fact, among a combined cohort of graduates from the Classes of 2017 and 2018, the median Pell recipient graduating from a bachelor’s degree program acquires $26,863 in student loans while their non-Pell counterparts borrow only $23,395 (15% more debt for Pell students than non-Pell).[3] In associate degree programs, non-Pell graduates had a median debt of $12,250 compared their Pell counterparts who had borrowed $16,370 (34% more). Non-Pell graduates who completed certificates also borrowed $9,833 in contrast to Pell graduates with $11,814 (20% more). Across these three credentials, the median Pell-to-non-Pell debt gap is $2,553.[4]

Pell Students Graduate with Higher Debt in Three-Quarters of Programs

Within the program-level data, Pell graduates borrowed more than non-Pell graduates at 75 percent of programs.[5] Across credentials, Pell graduates had borrowed more than non-Pell graduates at 74 percent of bachelor’s degree programs, 77 percent of associate degree programs, and 73 percent of undergraduate certificate programs. In many of the programs, the gap is quite large: About 28 percent of bachelor’s degree programs and 29 percent of associate degree programs reported Pell graduates borrowing more than $5,000 than their non-Pell peers. In about a quarter of programs, Pell graduates fare better than non-Pell graduates when it comes to debt loads, though the gaps are generally much smaller. Overall, only 3 percent of programs saw the debt loads of Pell graduates to be at least $5,000 less than non-Pell peers.

Billions Needed to Close Pell Debt Gap in Every Program

These Pell gaps mean that students from low-income families must repay more debt than their non-Pell peers, and the amounts add up in a startling way. After adding up the debt gap across programs where Pell students owe more than non-Pell students, the total Pell debt gap amounts to approximately $5.96 billion in extra loans across all three credentials, as shown in the visualization below.

View the interactive graph. * Displays the difference of average debt between Pell and non-Pell graduates multiplied by the number of Pell borrowers in each program. All figures limited to programs reporting data for both debt averages and that have a Pell gap of at least $1.

Importantly, these data may understate the true debt burden of Pell students. This is because Scorecard data exclude non-federal loans that play a crucial part in cumulative student debt of graduates. For instance, the latest Scorecard data suggest that the median debt of Catholic University graduates is between $15,500 to $27,000, depending on the program. However, Catholic University reported that indebted graduates leave school with about $46,700 in average debt once private, nonfederal loans are added in.[6] These same self-reported data show that 45 percent of their graduates’ debt consists of loans from banks, schools, or their state, not included in the much lower Scorecard figures.

Policymakers Should Double Down on Pell Grants

The federal Pell Grant program is the nation’s most effective investment in college affordability, but its purchasing power relative to college costs is at an all-time low. At its peak, the maximum Pell Grant covered 75 percent of the cost of tuition, room, and board for students attending public four-year colleges, a share that has fallen to just 28 percent today. Doubling the Pell Grant is critical to eliminating disproportionate debt burdens for low-income students, as well closing disparities in enrollment and completion by income. For more on why now is the time to double the Pell Grant, see our recent joint publication with UNCF.

Nancy Wong is a senior research associate for The Institute for College Access & Success

Originally published at https://ticas.org on December 21, 2020.

  1. TICAS calculations on U.S. Department of Education, 2015–16 National Postsecondary Student Aid Study (NPSAS:16)
  2. Among students who received federal student aid and graduated in award years 2016–17 and 2017–18, the following percentage graduated from a program with reported data: 87.9% of bachelor’s degrees; 70.8% of associates degree; and 75.5% of undergraduate certificates were not privacy suppressed. College Scorecard. 2020. Technical documentation: College scorecard data by field of study. https://collegescorecard.ed.gov/assets/FieldOfStudyDataDocumentation.pdf
  3. Median debt was calculated from institutions that reported actual data figures and were not privacy suppressed for median debt for Pell and Non-Pell recipients and their borrower counts. Institutions were limited to Title IV institutions where undergraduate students had borrowed federal loans and institutions were limited to main campuses. Finally, institutional sector was also limited to public, private non-profit, and private, for-profit institutions, excluding foreign institutions.
  4. The median Pell-to-non-Pell debt gap is calculated by first subtracting the median debt of Pell borrowers from Non-Pell borrowers. This median difference is summed up and aggregated into credential-level figures. Foreign institutions are excluded from this analysis.
  5. Data includes bachelor’s degree programs at public, private non-profit, and private for-profit institutions that received Title IV funding. Programs are limited to those that provided non-suppressed data for count of borrowers who received Stafford and Grad PLUS loans, median debt for Pell Grant recipients, and median debt for Non-Pell Grant recipients.
  6. Data is available at College Insight: https://college-insight.org/

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The Institute for College Access & Success

Source of research, design, & advocacy for student-centered public policies that promote affordability, accountability, and equity in higher ed. ticas.org