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New England Public Policy Center
Working Paper No. 07-1
by Bridget Terry Long, Ph.D., Harvard Graduate School of Education
and NBER
The returns to college are substantial, including increased
earnings and public benefits, such as better health and increased
involvement in public service and giving. As a result, since
the introduction of the Guaranteed Student Loan program in
1965 and the Pell Grant in 1972, the federal government has
experimented with using financial aid to increase college
access, choice, and affordability.
Although years of research support the notion that financial
aid can influence students' post-secondary decisions, questions
remain about the best ways to design such programs and the
relative effectiveness of different types of aid. Due to the
fact that an overwhelming proportion of the research on financial
aid focuses on grants, little is known about how a recent
shift to loans has affected student access to higher education
and their choice of institutions. Because loans are a much
more complicated form of financial aid than grants, there
is reason to suspect that their effectiveness differs from
other aid.
This paper attempts to provide additional information on
the impact of loans on college decisions by focusing on the
period during which college loans were made available to all
families, regardless of financial need. The major shift in
aid policy occurred due to the 1992 Higher Education Reauthorization
Act (HEA92). By exploiting this 1992 policy change as a natural
experiment, this paper examines the impact of introducing
a student loan program on college enrollment and choice. The
analysis uses the Consumer Expenditure Survey (CES) to detail
how the number of students in college (e.g., the access question)
and the amount of money spent on higher education and related
expenses (e.g., the choice question or "how much"
education was bought) changed after the policy change.
Full-text paper 
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