Area Schools Have Low Loan Default Rates

From: Phil de Haan <dehp@calvin.edu>
Date: Fri Sep 16 2005 - 10:23:52 EDT

September 16, 2005 == MEDIA ADVISORY

Graduates of West Michigan colleges and universities have some of the lowest
default rates on student loans in the state according to a report this week
from the U.S. Department of Education.

Area schools mirror a nationwide improvement in student loan default rates.

Among the best is Calvin College where in fiscal year 2003 (the most recent
year for which figures are available) just 0.4 percent of the school's
graduates making loan repayments were in default. For 2002 Calvin's figure was
1.1%, while in 2001 it checked in at 1.2%.

Calvin director of financial aid Ed Kerestly says the low loan default rate
for Calvin graduates is encouraging.

"While the focus of a Calvin education," he says, "is to prepare students for
a lifetime of experiences, not just one job, it is good to know that our
graduates can and do meet their financial commitments."

Calvin vice president Tom McWhertor says that part of the reason graduates of
Calvin are able to maintain a low default rate is that a Calvin education is
affordable and the school's scholarship and financial aid program is
effective.

"The cost of a Calvin education is within reach for most families," he says,
"and our graduates are not burdened with great debt when they graduate."

The average indebtedness for Calvin graduates who have student loans is about
$18,500 for the most recent year, not an insubstantial amount says Kerestly,
but less than the amount people often borrow to buy a car.

And unlike a car, Kerestly says, the value of a college education appreciates!
 Kerestly notes that a college graduate will make a million dollars more over
the course of her career than someone without a college degree.

Nationwide, the Department of Education said, just 4.5 percent of college
graduates who began making payments in fiscal 2003 defaulted on their debt - an
all-time low. Using statistics from schools and lenders, the Education
Department's default rate is based on the number of students who go 270 days
without making a payment during their first year of repaying a student loan.

The national student loan default rate reached a high of 22.4 percent in FY
1990 but has declined steadily since. U.S. Secretary of Education Margaret
Spellings credited schools, loan industry partners and the Education
Department's Federal Student Aid office for their concerted efforts to help
students repay their loans on time.

See http://www.ed.gov/news/pressreleases/2005/09/09142005.html

Numbers for most West Michigan colleges and universities were below the 4.5%
national average.

For example, for fiscal year 2003, Reformed Bible College was at a perfect
0.0% (down from 3,7 percent in 2002), Aquinas College was at a sterling 0.3%
(down from 1.9% in 2002 and 4.7% in 2001), Hope College was at 0.5% (down from
1.0% in 2002), Grand Valley at 1.9% (down from 2.8% in 2002), Cornerstone at
2.1% (up slightly from 1.8% in 2002), Grace Bible College at 2.3% (up from
0.0% in 202) and Grand Rapids Community College at 6.2% (down from 12.8% in
2002).

Contact Calvin's Ed Kerestly at 616-526-6137

-end-
Received on Fri Sep 16 10:24:16 2005

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