January 1, 2022

What's the WORST graduate school program in terms of being saddled with debt?

 The Wall Street Journal has been publishing a series of articles on the impacts of graduate student loans that allow students and their parents to borrow unlimited amounts of money to pay tuition and living expenses. 

New York University and Baylor University are among the most egregious in terms of raising tuition (both undergrad and graduate) and luring students and their parents into unsustainable debt. High tuition allows the universities to expand their administrative staff and facilities. While a few students will be able to earn enough to eventually repay loans, many of the parents never will. Further, U.S. taxpayers are left holding the bag. 

The worst problems are in graduate programs in arts, journalism, and, especially, film.

From a recent article: "We found that Columbia's master's programs in film had literally the worst debt to earnings ratio of any major university in the country." NYU's film program is a close competitor. 

"For Columbia's master in fine arts and film, the median debt is around $180,000 and the median annual earnings is less than $30,000." Better do some research on how much you are likely to earn before you commit to taking on too much debt. Many students who repay their debt based on income-based repayment plans watch their balance grow every year due to interest. 

BTW "Columbia is, has the eighth largest endowment in the country...."

The problem is not limited to big name schools. 

Moral of the story: Just because you can borrow that much money doesn't mean you should! 

Source: https://www.wsj.com/podcasts/the-journal/is-graduate-school-worth-the-price/7ccf26af-8ef8-44b9-99d8-e766c41ce106?mod=series_graddebt


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