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Subpriming Connecticut Students: Why We Need a Strong Consumer Financial Protection Agency

2009-12-01

conn_studentloans.pdf conn_studentloans.pdf

Connecticut-Students-PRESS-RELEASE.doc Connecticut-Students-PRESS-RELEASE.doc

Executive Summary

Introduction: Student Borrowing in Connecticut

Now more than ever, Connecticut’s future depends on the educational and economic success of its young people. Yet with tuition skyrocketing and entry-level jobs flat-lining, students in the state are borrowing more and more against their futures to pay for school. A startling 62 percent of Connecticut graduates last year had student debt, averaging $23,264 per indebted student.1 While most of that debt is in safe, lower-interest federal loans, a significant amount is in private loans that can carry interest rates of over 18 percent.2 In fact, last year Connecticut students graduated with an average of $6,684 in non-federal loans.3 That’s like putting more than the entire cost of tuition and books for a semester at UConn on a high-interest credit card that students can’t pay off for years.4 And like credit cards, private loans carry costly penalties and fees and are marketed heavily to students regardless of need, resulting in unnecessary and damaging levels of expensive debt. Unfortunately, unlike with credit cards, there has been no “Credit Card Holder’s Bill of Rights” for student loans to reign in the worst abuses in the private loan market. This absence of basic consumer protections is why Connecticut students need a new consumer watchdog.

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