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Warren Wants To Give Billions To Historically Black Colleges. They Typically Have Among The Lowest Loan Repayments

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Luke Rosiak Investigative Reporter
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  • Of the 100 colleges whose students most frequently fail to repay their student loans, most are historically black colleges and universities, according to federal data.
  • Most graduates of black colleges owe more in student loans 12 years after college than they did after graduation, according to Sen. Elizabeth Warren, who wants the government to give $50 billion to HBCUs.
  • She said their poor results are a result of racism by future employers, but did not say how more funding for the universities will help that.

The majority of historically black colleges’ graduates haven’t paid a single dollar of their student loan balance in the first several years of leaving school, federal data shows.

Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Elizabeth Warren’s college plan reserves $50 billion for minority-serving schools.

The majority of the 100 schools with the worst rate of three-year student loan repayment are historically black colleges and universities (HBCU), but only 5 percent of schools are HBCUs, The Wall Street Journal reported April 17.

Warren — a former Harvard Law School professor — proposed setting aside $50 billion for HBCUs and minority-serving institutions April 22. The HBCU proposal is part of Warren’s broader plan to have the government forgive existing student loans and pay for tuition moving forward.

U.S. 2020 Democratic presidential candidate and U.S. Senator Elizabeth Warren (D-MA), speaks at the 2019 National Action Network National Convention in New York

2020 Democratic presidential candidate and Sen. Elizabeth Warren speaks in New York, U.S. REUTERS/Lucas Jackson

“Because of factors like the size of these loans and discrimination in employment opportunities, black students who finished a bachelor’s degree on average owed more than their original student loan balance after 12 years,” the Massachusetts Democrat wrote.

Warren’s presidential campaign did not answer a question from The Daily Caller News Foundation on how spending more money on HBCUs would benefit graduates’ employment.

A higher-education adviser to former President Barack Obama, Zakiya Smith Ellis, told WSJ “it was probably the most shocking data of my career … We like to think of bachelor degrees at the Holy Grail.”

Over a 12-year period, black students who attend historically black colleges are more likely to default on student loans than black students who attend other public or nonprofit colleges, WSJ found, citing federal data. Student loans are guaranteed by the government, so taxpayers usually foot the bill when they do not pay. (RELATED: Colleges Took Chinese Propaganda Money, Hid It From Government)

WSJ did not include a ranking of the schools, but a DCNF analysis of the data identified the 30 colleges with the worst repayments, with historically black schools bolded:

College Paid Any Principal In 3 Years Defaulted In 3 Years Graduation Rate in 6 Years
Median Debt Of Grads
Virginia University of Lynchburg 11% 34% 42% $42,250
Apex School of Theology 11% 22% 98% $52,000
CollegeAmerica-Flagstaff 12% 19% 30% $25,732
Selma University 12% 28% 98% $26,200
Everest University-North Orlando 12% 32% 52% $20,954
Lane College 13% 11% 20% $37,909
Morris College 13% 8% 22% $33,900
Benedict College 13% 9% 22% $41,750
Allen University 14% 15% 18% $34,785
Martin University 15% 23% 5% $41,121
Clinton College 15% 25% 48% $19,000
Miles College 15% 11% 17% $33,755
Carver Bible College 15% 26% 53%
Livingstone College 16% 26% 25% $40,000
Concordia College Alabama 16% 33% 11% $35,000
North American University 16% 26% 100% $16,500
East-West University 16% 25% 11% $24,601
Metropolitan College of New York 16% 5% 25% $34,500
Le Moyne-Owen College 16% 24% 14% $31,119
Paine College 16% 26% 20% $35,000
United Tribes Technical College 17% 41% 18% $9,667
Edward Waters College 17% 24% 26% $29,875
Central State University 17% 28% 26% $35,000
Shaw University 17% 22% 19% $36,500
Jarvis Christian College 17% 17% 16% $31,226
Voorhees College 18% 20% 26% $30,256
CollegeAmerica-Denver 18% 13% 24% $27,217
Talladega College 18% 28% 43% $31,000
Texas College 18% 26% 18% $32,750
Charlotte Christian College and Theological Seminary 19% 18% 33%

Source: Department of Education College Scorecard data

At Bowie State University, for example, only 31 percent of former students are repaying their debt, even though the school’s typical loan repayment is $255 a month and costs $14,800 per year, data show. The average salary after attending is $48,000. (RELATED: New York’s Black Caucus Got $500k For Scholarships For The Needy. They Blew It On A Party With Limos And A Rapper Instead)

WSJ noted that students who attend a historically black college leave with “disproportionately high loans compared with their peers at other schools”

Paul Quinn College in Dallas has one of the lowest loan repayment rates in the country at only 21 percent. Its administrators said it is now requiring students to work part-time.

At an Alabama school, Miles College, administrators said some students were borrowing significant amounts for non-tuition expenses, and limits were imposed. It also shifted its focus toward majors leading to higher-paying jobs.

Low or nonexistent standards for admission are another factor WSJ identified. A quarter of HBCUs are open-enrollment, which accept people with poor high school records who are less likely to find gainful employment even if they have attended college classes.

Email Luke at luke@dailycallernewsfoundation.org. Follow him on Twitter.

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