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UMCP Student Loan Default Study & Financial Literacy Initiatives

UMCP Student Loan Default Study & Financial Literacy Initiatives. A Study of Defaulter Characteristics Among Undergraduate Students W ho Borrowed Any Federal Loan between1999 and 2009. Purpose and Scope.

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UMCP Student Loan Default Study & Financial Literacy Initiatives

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  1. UMCP Student Loan Default Study & Financial Literacy Initiatives A Study of Defaulter Characteristics Among Undergraduate Students Who Borrowed Any Federal Loan between1999 and 2009 UMD Office of Student Financial Aid

  2. Purpose and Scope The purpose of this study is to determine the indices that cause students to default on their student loans. • Describe the academic performance, demographics, and financial characteristics of students who defaulted. • Identify which characteristics are associated with the highest default rates. • Examine the relationship between graduation and each characteristic. UMD Office of Student Financial Aid

  3. Method • All degree-seeking undergraduate students who took any federal loan during a year they were enrolled between 1999 and 2009 (N=43,825). • Population was matched to a report of all students from the University of Maryland who defaulted on their loan(s) from Jan 1999 to June 2013 (N=2,031, 5%) • Not the same as default rate (no time limits, not cohort analysis) • All defaulters (3,084) also analyzed separately. UMD Office of Student Financial Aid

  4. Historical Default Rate • UMCP’s cohort default rate is consistently lower than the national average. • The UMCP default rate ranges from 1.2% in FY 2005 to 3.9% in FY 2008. The average rate is 2.2%. UMD Office of Student Financial Aid

  5. Defaulter Characteristics UMD Office of Student Financial Aid

  6. Defaulter Characteristics, Cont. UMD Office of Student Financial Aid

  7. Default Rate by Total Number of Loans UMD Office of Student Financial Aid

  8. Time to Default Among students who default, about half do so within five years UMD Office of Student Financial Aid

  9. Default Rate by Graduation • Students that do not graduate have default rates more than 3.7 times higher than those that do graduate. UMD Office of Student Financial Aid

  10. Default Rate by Gender • Males have a slightly higher risk of default overall. • Failure to graduate increases risk of default among males but not females. UMD Office of Student Financial Aid

  11. Default Rate by Race/Ethnicity • While over half (58%) of the loan takers are White, just 33% of the defaulters are White. Black/African American students make up 22% of the cohort but 52% of defaulters. • Among students who do not graduate, Black/African American students are almost three times as likely as White students to default. UMD Office of Student Financial Aid

  12. Default Rate by Dependency • 15% of the loan takers filed FAFSAs as independents. They have default rates 2.3 times higher than dependent students. UMD Office of Student Financial Aid

  13. Default Rate by Transfer Status • Transfer students are more likely to default than first time students (6% vs 4%). They are more likely to default regardless of whether they graduate. UMD Office of Student Financial Aid

  14. Default Rate by Residency Status • In state and out of state students have very similar default rates, but if they do not graduate, out of state students are more likely to default than instate students. UMD Office of Student Financial Aid

  15. Default Rate by School of Major • Students in Undergraduate Studies have the highest default rate overall, however loan takers in Special Programs have the highest default rate among graduates. • While students in the Business, Architecture and Journalism schools are at the least risk of defaulting, students in these schools who do not graduate have default rates similar to (if not higher than) those not graduating from other schools. UMD Office of Student Financial Aid

  16. Default Rate by Terms Enrolled • Students enrolled in 13+ terms were more likely to default regardless of their graduation outcome, but those that did not graduate were almost three times more likely to default than those that did graduate. UMD Office of Student Financial Aid

  17. Default Rate by High School GPA • Students with low high school GPAs were much more likely to default regardless of whether they completed their undergraduate degree. Almost one in five students with low high school GPA’s who did not graduate from college defaulted on their loans. UMD Office of Student Financial Aid

  18. Default Rate by UG GPA* • Those with higher cumulative undergraduate GPAs are least likely to default: C students are 6.5 times more likely to default than A students (8.5% vs 1.3%) • Failure to graduate doubles the C student’s risk of default (13% vs 6%). *UG GPA is the cumulative GPA as of the last term enrolled as an undergraduate. UMD Office of Student Financial Aid

  19. Default Rate by Average EFC • On average, the yearly EFC of students who defaulted was $3,843 less than those who did not default ($9,421.52 compared to $5,578.16) (not shown below) UMD Office of Student Financial Aid

  20. Default Rate by Total Loan Amount • In general, students taking very high cumulative loan amounts are more likely to default. Among students who graduate, the risk of default does not increase until the total loan amount exceeds $20,000. • Students taking more than $20,000 in loans who do not graduate are 3.6 times more likely to default than those who do graduate. UMD Office of Student Financial Aid

  21. Major Indices for Risk of Defaulting • Failure to graduate • Socio-Economic Barriers • Independent filing status • Enrollment for 13+ Terms • C and below student • Undeclared major student • Cumulative loans > $20,000; total # loans >10 UMD Office of Student Financial Aid

  22. Default Rates and Graduation • Graduation seems to mediate other risk factors for defaulting. • Academic performance measures are the most powerful indicator of potential to default if graduation is not considered. • Failure to graduate has the biggest effect on default rates among African American students, students who were enrolled for more than 13 terms, and students who have total loan amounts greater than $20,000, and. UMD Office of Student Financial Aid

  23. So What? Now What? • Adjusted our Financial Aid Website • Personalized Counseling – Loan borrowers with Distinct Characteristics • Created a Bookmark and Pens • Teach Javanomics at Univ100 Class • Enhanced Satisfactory Academic Policy Requirements • Profiled Student Loan Borrowing Using 8% Rule for Indebtedness • Expanded our Senior Debt Cap program • In Progress – Working with Experts in the Industry for Campus Wide Literacy Hired a Senior Financial Aid Financial Literacy Expert UMD Office of Student Financial Aid

  24. UMD Office of Student Financial Aid

  25. Questions? Sarah Bauder Assistant Vice President Financial Aid and Enrollment Services sbauder@umd.edu 301-314-8279 UMD Office of Student Financial Aid

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