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Graduates of West Michigan
colleges and universities have some of the lowest default rates on student
loans in the state according to a report this week from the U.S. Department
of Education.
Among the best is Calvin
College where in fiscal year 2002 (the most recent year for which figures
are available) just 1.1 percent of the school's graduates making loan
repayments were in default. For 2001 Calvin's figure was 1.2%, while
it checked in at 1.1% in 2000 and 1.4% in 1999.
Nationwide, the Department
of Education said, just 5.2 percent of college graduates who began making
payments in fiscal 2002 defaulted on their debt - an all-time low. Using
statistics from schools and lenders, the Education Department's default
rate is based on the number of students who go 270 days without making
a payment during their first year of repaying a student loan.
The national student loan
default rate reached a high of 22.4 percent in FY 1990 but has declined
steadily since. Department officials attribute the drop in defaults
to improved credit counseling, more flexible repayment schedules and
low interest rates.
West Michigan colleges and
universities mirror that trend. For 2002, Hope College was at 1.0% (down
from 1.8% in 2001), Cornerstone at 1.8% (down from 2.1% in 2001), Aquinas
at 1.9% (down from 4.7% in 2001) and Grand Valley at 2.8% (down from
2.9% in 2001).
Calvin director of financial
aid Ed Kerestly says the low loan default rate for Calvin graduates
is encouraging.
"While the focus of
a Calvin education is to prepare students for lifetime of experiences
- not just one job - it is good," he says, "to know that our
graduates can and do meet their financial commitments."
Calvin vice president Tom
McWhertor says that part of the reason graduates of Calvin are able
to maintain a low default rate is that a Calvin education is affordable
and the school's scholarship and financial aid program is effective.
"The cost of a Calvin
education is within reach for most families," he says, "and
our graduates are not burdened with great debt when they graduate."
Kerestly notes that the
average indebtedness for Calvin graduates who have student loans is
about $15,500 for the most recent year. While that is not an insubstantial
amount, he says, it's less than the amount people often borrow to buy
a car.
"And," he adds
with a chuckle, "while a car does nothing but depreciate we believe
a Calvin degree actually appreciates."
In fact, the average college
graduate, Kerestly says, will make a million dollars more over the course
of her career than someone without a college degree.
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