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PLUS or Minus? The Effect of Graduate School Loans on Access, Attainment, and Prices

In 2006, the federal government effectively uncapped student borrowing for graduate programs with the introduction of the Graduate PLUS loan program. Access to additional federal loans increased graduate students’ borrowing and shifted the composition of their loans from private to federal debt. However, the increase in borrowing limits did not improve access to existing programs overall or for underrepresented groups. Nor did access to additional loan aid result in significant increase in constrained students’ persistence or degree receipt. We document that among programs in which a larger share of graduate students had exhausted their annual federal loan eligibility before the policy change—and thus were more exposed to the expansion in access to credit—federal borrowing and prices increased.

Education level
Document Object Identifier (DOI)
10.26300/wx5v-c114
EdWorkingPaper suggested citation:
Black, Sandra E., Lesley J. Turner, and Jeffrey T. Denning. (). PLUS or Minus? The Effect of Graduate School Loans on Access, Attainment, and Prices. (EdWorkingPaper: -781). Retrieved from Annenberg Institute at Brown University: https://doi.org/10.26300/wx5v-c114

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