College grads increasingly among ranks of bankrupt

Posted Sept. 13, 2011, at 9:54 a.m.
Last modified Sept. 13, 2011, at 11:41 a.m.
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College graduates are increasingly going bankrupt, according to a recent survey.
College graduates are increasingly going bankrupt, according to a recent survey.

College graduates are the fastest-growing group of consumers who have filed for bankruptcy protection in the past five years, according to a new study by a financial nonprofit group, which underscores the broad reach of the Great Recession.

The survey by the Institute for Financial Literacy, slated for release Tuesday, found that the percentage of debtors with a bachelor’s degree rose from 11.2 percent in 2006 to 13.6 percent in 2010. The group tracked similar but smaller increases in consumers with two-year associate and graduate degrees. Meanwhile, the percentage of debtors with a high school diploma or who did not finish college declined.

“We’re told that if you do go and get advanced education, you’re going to be almost guaranteed this economic success,” said Leslie Linfield, the group’s executive director. But the recession proved that “higher education was no guarantee that you weren’t going to be at risk.”

According to government data, bankruptcies spiked in the years following the financial crisis, peaking at 1.5 million in 2010. Robert Lawless, a bankruptcy professor at the University of Illinois College of Law, attributed the rise in filings to the contraction in available consumer credit as lenders tightened underwriting standards and lowered loan limits. That left a wide swath of cash-strapped consumers with no way to continue financing their lives.

“As consumer credit tightens, people run out of options,” he said.

The government does not track filers’ demographic data. But Linfield said the groups that have historically been most affected are low-income consumers without college degrees. They still account for the largest share of bankruptcy petitioners: Linfield’s research found about 38 percent of debtors make less than $20,000 and about a third have only a high school diploma.

But Linfield said the recent increase in the number of bankruptcy filings is driven largely by wealthier, more-educated households. The percentage of debtors with bachelor’s degrees peaked in 2009 and inched down in 2010. Those with graduate degrees jumped from 4.9 percent in 2006 to 6.7 percent last year. And those earning more than $60,000 rose from 5.5 percent to 9.2 percent.

Linfield said she is also concerned about the age of debtors. Over the past five years, the number of consumers filing for bankruptcy between ages 18 and 34 has fallen 31 percent, her study found. Meanwhile, the number of people 55 and older, who have less time to recover financially, has jumped 25 percent.

The group surveyed more than 50,000 consumers who participated in its credit counseling or financial education courses, a requirement for those seeking bankruptcy protection. They account for roughly 3 percent of bankruptcies filed in 2010.

Typically, credit cards and other unsecured loans force most people into bankruptcy, Linfield said. But she thinks hefty mortgages and falling home values contributed to the spike in filings among wealthier households and college graduates. More than 70 percent of consumers in the survey said they were filing for bankruptcy protection because they were overextended in credit, up from 63 percent in 2006. Reduction in income moved from third to second place.

Linfield said those trends may change this year as the overall number of bankruptcies begins to ease. According to government data, the number of filers for the year ended in June dropped 2 percent from the previous year. Monthly data from the American Bankruptcy Institute, an industry research group, showed August bankruptcies dropped by 11 percent from a year ago. Samuel Gerdano, executive director of ABI, attributed the decline to a slowdown in spending as consumers repair their personal balance sheets.

“They take a step back from the ledge, if you will, of needing bankruptcy protection if something bad happens,” he said.

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  • Anonymous

    Humanity requires financing.

    Your thought for the day.

    At no charge, by the way.

  • Anonymous

    Maybe they should have taken Obamanomics 101 before they voted for him…..

  • Anonymous

    Well, children pummeled from birth by television, radio, print media and movies to look at all the wonderful things credit can buy don’t necessarily have the understanding that such credit needs to be repaid…  And, with a newly minted college degree but no job thanks to a Congress in the pocket of the credit and banking slime preventing job creation, is there any surprise that many new graduates seek bankruptcy protection?

  • waynorth1

    Back in the bubble, parents had a bit extra to help them.  If you ask me, the whole thing went to H*LL when video games went to a whole new level, Playstation, X-Box……what college kid or high school for that matter wouldn’t want to be a college “lifer,” don’t have to work, 10 years plus, rack up Sallie Mae, party, game it all night….Sallie Mae doesn’t even require proof of where the money goes…..just willing to throw it out there.  Still say and will always say, instead of home ec and tech ed, kids need a freakin life/budgeting skills class in high school, otherwise this next generation is going to be even worse.  Give me, give me, give me. 

  • Anonymous

    Higher education is not for everyone despite what everyone says.  I definitely met and know several people that wasted their time going to college.  

  • Anonymous

    It looks like a college degree isn’t such a hot investment in your future these days.

  • Anonymous

    A major issue is high school curriculums don’t invest any real time teaching economics and money management.  Too many students are taking out a fortune in student loans with no thought at all to whether their major is going to lead to a job that pays enough to address the mountain of debt they have accumulated. 

  • Anonymous

    If you think education is expensive , try ignorance.
    Look to the White House for an example.

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