TITLE:
The Debt Paradox: How Student Loans Simultaneously Enhance Earnings and Constrain Life Choices among College Graduates
AUTHORS:
Osasohan Agbonlahor
KEYWORDS:
Student Loan Debt, Higher Education, Earnings, Life Course Transitions
JOURNAL NAME:
Open Journal of Social Sciences,
Vol.13 No.7,
July
29,
2025
ABSTRACT: The substantial growth in student loan debt has raised concerns about its impact on college graduates’ post-college lives. Drawing on data from the Baccalaureate and Beyond Longitudinal Study (B&B:08/18), this paper examines the relationship between federal student loan debt and multiple post-graduation outcomes among bachelor’s degree recipients over a ten-year period. Using ordinary least squares regression, Probit models, propensity score matching, and institutional fixed effects approaches, the analysis reveals a seemingly paradoxical relationship: higher student loan debt is associated with higher earnings but also with an increased likelihood of delaying major life decisions including home purchase, marriage, and childbearing. Additionally, graduates with higher debt are more likely to work outside their field of study, work more hours than desired, and pursue graduate education. These relationships vary substantially by gender, race/ethnicity, and field of study. The debt-earnings relationship is stronger for women than men and significant for White and Asian graduates but not for Black graduates. Fields with higher debt-to-income ratios show stronger associations between debt and delayed life decisions. These findings highlight the multifaceted impact of educational debt on graduates’ lives and have important implications for higher education financing policies and student support services.