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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (July 21, 2005)
Spending: House subcommittee lobbies to protect Perkins Loan program Continued from page 1 Grants and loans The U.S. House Subcommittee on 21st Century Competitiveness ap proved a bill last Thursday to per suade Congress to protect the Perkins Loan program for universities in re sponse to the complete elimination of the program in the President’s pro posed fiscal year 2006 budget, ac cording to a press release. Perkins Loans are a type of finan cial aid given to 5 percent of the na tion’s college students. These loans provide up to $4,000 a year for under graduate and $6,000 for graduate stu dents, depending on eligibility. They are particularly appealing to students coming in from lower-income house holds because the loans have low in terest rates and require students to be enrolled in only six credit-hours per term, allowing them to work and go to school simultaneously. If Congress approved this section of next year’s budget, more than 700,000 students would be affected and at least $6 billion would be sent back to Wash ington, and that cost would be picked up by universities with Perkins loans, according to the release. The decreased affordability of col lege for incoming freshmen has led to a decline in the enrollment rate for students coming from low and mid dle-income households. Grants and loans aimed at lower and middle-income households con tinue to lose federal funding, creating an affordability issue for incoming freshmen and other students seeking aid. Meanwhile, historical statistics show that education directly relates to income, unemployment, crime and poverty. Education affects earnings and unemployment A report from the National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) shows that the median annual earn ing of full-time, full-year wage and salary workers decreased between 1979 and 2003 for black, white and Hispanic workers between the ages of 25 and 34. Black workers who completed high school but did not at tend college saw a $2,200 decrease in salaries and wages. Whites experi enced a $4,800 decline, while His panics lost $5,200 in annual earnings. Highlighting the importance of a college education in relation to salaries and wages, black and white workers who completed college with a Bachelor's degree saw in creases of $3,100 and $1,300 respec tively. Salaries and wages declined $2,000 in 2003 for Hispanic college graduates, but at a slower pace than the $5,200 decrease for those with out a degree. Median annual earnings of full-time, full-year wage and salary workers age 25-34 (in constant 2003 dollars) WHITE BLACK HISPANIC 2003 2000 1999 1989 1979 Net Change in Salary from 1979-2003 Bret Furtwangler | Graphic artist Statistics from the report show that 9 percent of people between the ages of 29 and 34 with less than a high school diploma were unemployed in 2004. Six percent of people with a diploma and 5 percent of people with “some college” were unemployed. For people with a Bachelor’s degree or more, only 3 percent were unem ployed in 2004, The relationship between educa tion and unemployment has been constant since the 1970s, according to a NCES report. It states, “generally speaking, the more education a per son attains, the less likely that person is to be unemployed.” In Oregon in 2000, more than 85 percent of citizens 25 or older had a diploma and more than 25 percent had a Bachelor’s degree or higher. For Lane County these statistics are slightly higher. A 2002 report pub lished in “The Review of Economics and Statistics” found that the average wages of non-college-educated men — those with a high-school diploma or less, fell 23 percent from 1979 to 1993. A 2000 NCES report found the same thing, stating, “there is a strong positive relationship between educa tion attainment and earnings. ” Annual earnings, unemployment and crime MIT research found that a decline in wages offered “increases the rela tive payoff of criminal activity.” The study found that a 23.3 percent fall in the wages of non-college-educated males from 1979 to 1997 predicts a 12.5 percent increase in property crime and a 25.1 percent increase in violent crime. This correlation is ex plained in their conclusion: “al though crime rates are found to be significantly determined by both the wage and unemployment rates of less educated males, our results indi cate that a sustained long-term de crease in crime rates will depend on whether the wages of less skilled men continue to improve.” Therefore, the correlation between attainment of education and earnings have a direct relationship with the “rel ative payoff of criminal activity” for those experiencing wage decreases. Attaining a college education A report published by the Nation al Bureau of Economic Research in 2002 found that the bottom 90 per cent of the labor force saw a drop in average income from $27,060 in 1970 to $27,035 in 2000, while the top 10 percent saw increases of 88 percent. Over this 30-year period the average salaries and wages increased slightly overall, but even those in the 80th to 90th percentile, workers making up the bottom 10 percent of high income households, saw a drop in salaries and wages. For those representing the bottom 70 percent, income levels dropped further while the bottom 20 percent saw the greatest decrease in average income. These statistics point to the evolving problem of fi nancial stability, making it more diffi cult for the bottom 90 percent of the labor force to afford, among other needs, higher education. Low and middle-income financial aid scarcity Federal loans were estimated to make up 45.5 percent of the total student aid for the 2003-04 academ ic year, but actually came out to 56 percent as the number of students applying for loans increased. The percentage change in total loans borrowed from the 1994-95 academ ic year to the 2002-03 academic year increased 641 percent, according to the U.S. Department of Education, Office of Postsecondary Education. The number of students borrowing loans from 1994 to 2003 increased 668 percent for the most popular Stafford loans and 871 percent for unsubsidized loans, according to the U.S. Department of Education. Federal Pell Grants are another source of financial aid for low and middle-income students. Pell Grants were estimated to make up almost 10.5 percent of the total student aid for the 2003-04 academic year. The amount of money spent on the pro gram was “the smallest real increase since 1999-2000” at 6 percent, ac cording to College TYends, 2004. The number of Pell Grant recipi ents rose 37 percent over 10 years, while the maximum a recipient can receive has remained constant over the last three. Further, Pell Grants were originally predicted to cover 34 percent of total costs of a public four year university in the 2005 budget, but ended up covering only 23 per cent. This is a 49 percent decrease from 1976, when the grants covered 72 percent of total costs. The Pell Grant program also saw a 1 percent decrease in the maximum awards in 2003-04. These statistics may be a re sult of the Pell Grant program’s “3.7 billion funding shortfall” in the fiscal year 2005 budget, as stated in the Of fice of Management and Budget. Funding has risen 60 percent in real terms since 1999-2000, but because of a 7 percent increase from 2002-03 to 2003-04 the average grant actually fell by 1 percent. So while “the aver age grant has increased by 17 percent in real terms since 1999-2000,” the amount of money awarded per stu dent has actually decreased. Subsidized loans, for which the government pays the interest while a student is enrolled in school, may be another option for low and middle income students hoping to pay off the remaining 77 percent of college costs. Individual grant recipients were awarded $27 less in 2003-04 than the previous year. If the number of recipients continues to rise at the 2000-01 rate, Pell Grant recipients can expect to be given even less than the 2003-04. Unless a significant increase in funding for fiscal year 2007 is passed, the percentage of college costs covered by the awards will like ly continue to decline. Although no correlation is men tioned between grant funding and loans, the growth rate in loans per student in 2003-04 was about three times the growth rate of grants per student, according to the College Ttends, 2004. Declining rates of enrollment Enrollment trends from 1979 to 1989 showed an 18.4 percent in crease for students from low-income households, or the bottom 20 per cent, but only a 1.3 percent increase from 1989 to 1999. In this case, the enrollment of students from low-in come households fell 3.6 percent from 1979 to 2003, while middle-in come households saw a 3 percent de crease. Only students coming from households in the top 20th percentile of income saw an increased rate of enrollment, at 1.9 percent. EDUCATION, page 12 mm mioiii 199 E. 5th Ave *(541)484-1334 Sushi on the conveyor Variety of sushi, sashimi, and chef specials starting at $1.50 015103 • Lunch special: • Box • Tempura • Teriyaki • Udon • Yakisoba • Katsu • Variety of sea food salad • To go available • and more Lunch Mon-Fri 11:30 - 2:30 Dinner Mon-Sat 5:00-10:00 Sunday Closed rtirt *: oNkti k ioNl kt 492 E. 13th 686-2458 For the week starting Friday, July 22nd! "A delightful, wholesome experience for the family" —Oesson Thomson, WASHINGTON POST MARCH OF THE PENGUINS Special matinees at 3: 15 daily*!! Please DO NOT use our parking lot for this showing There is plenty of street parking Or ride your bikes1 v3:15), 5:15,7:15,9:15 0 M-F no parking in lot for 3:15 show) the parrots of Exotic Bird Rescue! Volunteers and their birds would love to meet you for an informal reception Thursday, July 28th, at 6:30 pm. Requested donation of $5-10 to help care for and find homes for these SM? / adorable pet parrots. w'Ckt1*'9Wild Parrots endsoon! ^Telegraph Hill Special matinees at 3:30 daily111 Please DO NOT use our parking lot for this showing There is plenty of street parking Or nde your bikes' Daily (3:30), 5:30.7:30,9:30 (M-F no parking in lot for 3:30 show) NEXT ME & YOU & EVERYONE WE KNOW BIJOU LATENITE Fr-Sat S4 Su S3 oupt5oy m 11:30 pm Fri, Sat & Sun nights 0 pm Fn, Sat & Sun night; ZlGGy STARDUST 11,15 pm Fri, Sat & Sun nights Mad t; DuCkLIn f ■ "i Childn Jheat Presents Judith Vi Al Book an Mush July 26-3\ All shows begk The Muscel «ss crynrrts: Join us on the lawn of the Robinson Theatre on the UO Campus! Limited free parking is available. Discounts for groups of 10 or more. .DrJ^ For information 'o9.7tm & reservations call 0“ 346-4192 Mad Duckling is made passible with