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Where Does It Hurt?
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The world facing today's college graduate just ain't what it used to be. More than $20,000 in debt and faced with plummeting wages, scarce jobs, unaffordable health insurance and exorbitant rent, the average grad is choking on the dregs of the American dream.
But things dont have to keep getting worse. Its worth keeping in mind that there is an election coming up and that the ballot and your wallet are inextricably linked. The choices are clear – between candidates who will continue the downward trend for young people and candidates who may actually improve things for them.
Consider what has been happening with college tuition and financial aid. An unprecedented 28 percent of 25- to 29-year-olds reported holding a bachelors degree at the last Census. But for that leg-up into middle class comfort, they paid unprecedented tuition, which, according to the College Board, has shot up 47 percent at public universities and 42 percent at private ones in the last decade. Last year alone, tuition at the average public college jumped 14 percent, while state budget cuts to education were among the most severe in decades.
As tuition skyrockets, financial aid has become as elusive as that needle in the proverbial haystack. In the 1970s, the Pell Grant, a rock for low-income students, covered more than 80 percent of the cost of tuition at a public university, but today it pays less than 40 percent, according to the U.S. Public Interest Research Groups Higher Education Project. And the Bush Administrations proposed 2005 budget freezes spending on the grants and other crucial student aid for the third year in a row. Under that budget, which amounts to a 5 percent cut if you factor in inflation, 8,000 fewer students get a Pell Grant this year compared to last year.
With grants hard to come by, most students have to borrow on their degree. Loans now account for 60 percent of Joe Students financial aid, with the average grad racking up $18,900 in student loans. And with credit card touts on most campuses, Joe and Jane toss their caps an extra couple of thousand dollars in the red.
Lugging their hard-earned debt as they fumble for the bottom rung of the corporate ladder, graduates are finding that the jobs just arent there. The employment rate for recent college grads had fallen more steeply than any time since 1979, according to the Economic Policy Institute. The same was true for college grads of all ages. Meanwhile salaries just haven't kept up with swelling debt or even the cost of living. Between 2001 and 2003, real hourly wages declined for the first time in more than a decade; before that they had grown at just 3 percent a year since the mid 1990s.
And even if Jane Grad finds a steady – albeit lower-paying – income, the perks that smoothed her parents climb to economic security have gone the way of the pet rock.
Take health insurance. Once out of college, shes no longer covered under her parents' plan, and access to cheaper student plans dries up. The chances of getting a job with benefits look scarcely more promising than lotto odds. "The kinds of jobs you're eligible for are the kinds that often don't come with health insurance," said Sara Collins, an economist for the Commonwealth Fund, a nonprofit based in New York City.
Since 1987, the number of uninsured young adults has grown at twice the rate of older adults, even though the demographic itself is shrinking. Nearly 18 million adults under 35 went without insurance for all of 2002, the most recent year for which statistics are available – an increase of 1.2 million from the year before. Half were uninsured for some part of 2002.
Saddled with loans and lacking benefits, young adults must choose between health insurance and other expenses. They "are in a stage where people have debts from school, they are trying to buy a house, and that seems more important than paying for health insurance, which might cost multiple thousands each year," said Robert Blendon, a professor of health policy and political analysis at Harvard University.
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