Goldrick-Rab, SaraHoule, JasonKelchen, Robert2019-08-022019-08-022014-10-14http://hdl.handle.net/10919/92682Borrowing from federal government loan programs to finance college is now commonplace for American undergraduates. Half of all college students had such loans in 2011-12. The typical senior has accumulated about $20,000 in debt – and total college loan indebtedness had grown to more than $1 trillion by 2011-12. Repayments for more than one in ten loans are currently at least ninety days overdue, and the delinquency rate has doubled over the last decade. With lower incomes and less wealth overall, black families have a greater need to borrow to send their sons and daughters to college – and black students are twice as likely as whites to have student debt. This report points out some recommendations for reforms to the Higher Education Act.application/pdfenCreative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 Internationalstudent loan programsstudent financial aidBlack studentsAfrican American studentseducation, higher--government policyWill Impending Reforms in Federal College Loan Programs Hurt Black Students and Families?Reporthttps://scholars.org/print/pdf/node/5036