As colleges across America prepare to award degrees in the coming weeks, commencement speakers can find much to celebrate about the class of 2014. According to the Department of Education, current graduates are part of the largest, most diverse cohort of collegians in American history.
That’s the good news. The bad? They’re also the most indebted.
Student marketing company Edvisors calculates that the average student in the class of 2014 is expected to graduate with nearly $33,000 in debt, with nearly 60 percent of all college students having taken out a student loan. And because the debt burden has risen significantly faster than inflation, up a whopping 361.3% since 2003 according to the New York Federal Reserve, the total pile of student debt in the United States now sits at almost $1.2 trillion dollars.
So how much is $1.2 trillion actually worth? It’s more than twice the size of the projected federal budget deficit for this year. It’s also about the size of the entire economies of countries like South Korea or Mexico. In fact, if Americans students could have used their education loans as purchasing power, these expenditures would amount to the world’s 15th largest economy.









