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Dealing With Debt: 1992-93 Bachelor's Degree Recipients 10 Years LaterNCES 2006-156, June 2006
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Table 17. Among 1992–93 bachelor’s degree recipients who had no additional degree enrollment and took out Stafford loans, percentage who had any periods of forbearance, average length of time until the first period, and average amount of loans, by selected student characteristics: 2003
      Average Stafford loan amount
Student characteristics Percent
with any
forbearance
Average number
of years from
bachelor’s degree
to first forbearance
If forbearance If no forbearance

     Total 12.3 4.8 $11,400 $7,400
         
Amount borrowed (undergraduate)        
  Less than $5,000 4.7 2,800
  $5,000–9,999 10.8 4.7 7,900 7,400
  $10,000–14,999 20.9 4.8 12,500 12,200
  $15,000 or more 25.9 5.2 19,800 18,100
          
Salary in 1994        
  Lowest 19.7 4.5 11,000 7,300
  Low middle 17.4 4.4 11,300 6,600
  High middle 9.9 5.5 10,600 7,200
  Highest 7.5 5.1 13,100 7,800
         
Debt burden in 19941        
  Not making repayments 11.7 5,000
  Less than 5 percent 4.3 5,000
  5–8 percent 11.4 4.8 9,300 8,000
  9–12 percent 18.0 4.2 11,900 10,400
  More than 12 percent 18.9 4.3 13,800 10,000
         
Stafford loan deferments by 2003        
  Any deferments 43.3 5.0 12,000 9,600
  No deferments 10.5 4.7 11,200 7,300
         
Stafford loan defaults by 2003        
  Ever defaulted 25.0 4.7 13,000 9,000
  Never defaulted 10.9 4.8 10,900 7,200

‡ Reporting standards not met (too few cases).

1 Debt burden is the monthly loan payment as a percentage of monthly income.

NOTE: Estimates include students from the 50 states, DC, and Puerto Rico.

SOURCE: U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, 1993/03 Baccalaureate and Beyond Longitudinal Study (B&B:93/03).

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