Education & Youth

New Georgia Project, SBPC talk Black student debt


The New Georgia Project and the Student Borrower Protection Center hosted a joint webinar over Zoom last Thursday, breaking down the disparities plaguing Black and brown student loan borrowers in minority-dominated areas, as a landmark executive order to eliminate student debt for millions across the country awaits approval from the U.S. Supreme Court.

The virtual event was arranged in coordination with the release of a new research report from the SBPC, documenting the socioeconomic burden of student debt and its impact on minority students and graduates in the metro Atlanta area.
This month’s report represents one segment of the organization’s multi-part series that will cover the effects of accruing student debt on borrowers of color across the southern United States.

Kat Welbeck, advocacy director and civil rights counsel at the SBPC, said the nonprofit’s research proves that students and families of color are disproportionately impacted by student loan debt when compared to their white counterparts, due to Black and brown families on average possessing a fraction of the wealth of white families on a local and national scale. This leads to students of color taking out larger loans to afford higher education.



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