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paragraph thus The impact of student debt on financial security will be even greater on many borrowers, however, because our briefâs calculation of the wealth loss caused by student debt is, in many ways, a best-case scenario. The $200,000 estimate for lost wealth is for an average dual-income household where both partners graduated from four-year public universities and are never unemployed and always save thereafter, but the large number of graduates from less-ideal circumstances face even greater losses. As our brief highlights, students who graduated from private not-for-profit schools, students of color, and students from low-income families graduate with larger average debt burdens than the average public school graduate. Seventy-five percent of students from families with incomes less than $60,000 graduate with student loan debt, a higher share than the 66 percent of graduates overall who do. More students at private not-for-profit colleges graduate with debt, and more of it: as of 2008, an average of $27,650, about a third more than public school grads. But the hardest hit by student debt are for-profit college students. Not only do they graduate with the highest average debt ($33,050) but theyâre also less likely, for various reasons, to find a job after school. The wealth loss from their student debt is so large that some for-profit graduates are effectively âunderwaterâ on their college investment: they will actually have a lower lifetime net worth than if they hadnât gone to school at all.
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