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Introduction

On October 13, 2021, Baylor University officials woke up to a public-relations nightmare: an expos茅 in The Wall Street Journal entitled 鈥淗ow Baylor Steered Lower-Income Parents to Debt They Couldn鈥檛 Afford.鈥1

The newspaper revealed that the world鈥檚 largest Baptist university had been pushing low- and lower-middle-income families to borrow substantial amounts of federal Parent PLUS loans 鈥渢o cover rising tuition,鈥 leaving them 鈥渨ith debt they can鈥檛 repay.鈥 U.S. Department of Education data showed that after two years in repayment, 鈥渙nly about a quarter of [all] Baylor parents paid down any of what they originally borrowed.鈥2 The university was, in other words, knowingly putting these cash-strapped families in harm鈥檚 way.

Congress created the Parent PLUS loan program in 1980 to help middle- and upper-middle-income students and their families afford expensive colleges.3 For low-income families with few assets, taking out PLUS loans is an extremely risky proposition. Unlike federal student loans, which are strictly limited to $5,500 to $7,500 per year for most students under the age of 24, PLUS loans allow parents to borrow up to the full cost of attendance, which includes not only tuition and fees but living expenses as well, regardless of their income. To obtain the loan, a parent need only pass an adverse credit history check, which does not assess whether the borrower will be able to repay the debt. Parent PLUS debt, like federal student loans, generally cannot be discharged in bankruptcy, and the loans are subject to the government鈥檚 extraordinary debt collection powers, including wage garnishment and partial offsets of defaulted borrowers鈥 Social Security benefits and income tax refunds.

Failure to repay these loans could lead to financial disaster, particularly for older Americans with few resources.

Baylor鈥檚 inability or unwillingness to adequately support low- and lower-middle-income students, however, did not discourage university officials from seeking them out. If anything, they recruited these students even more aggressively. Between 2010 and 2015, recipients of Pell Grants, the federal government鈥檚 primary source of funding for low-income students, grew to one-fifth or more of the student body annually.

Why would Baylor aggressively recruit low-income students if it could not adequately support them? And why would the university steer those students鈥 families to PLUS loans they most likely couldn鈥檛 repay? The answer to those questions came down to the outsize ambitions Baylor鈥檚 leaders had for the institution and the financial resources it would take to achieve them.

Founded in 1845 on the banks of the Brazos River in Waco, Texas, Baylor, for generations, offered a relatively affordable education to the offspring of middle-class Baptist families. But by the turn of the twenty-first century, Baylor officials set a lofty goal: to become the country鈥檚 top Protestant higher education institution, the Baptist version of the University of Notre Dame.4 To accomplish such an ambitious feat, the university needed lots of money.5 As a result, Baylor officials hiked up tuition鈥攂y as much as 40 percent per year. They also borrowed hundreds of millions in the bond market, allowing them to go on a building and faculty-hiring spree. And they hired the private enrollment management consulting firm Noel Levitz (which later merged with the enrollment and fundraising management company RuffaloCODY and became Ruffalo Noel Levitz) to help them develop admissions and financial aid strategies and algorithms to increase the university鈥檚 revenue and raise its U.S. News & World Report ranking.6 They knew that rising in the rankings would make the university more appealing to the upscale students and families they were hoping to attract.

At the enrollment management company鈥檚 urging, the university began engaging in an enrollment management practice known as financial aid leveraging or financial aid optimization, in which analysts determine the precise price points at which colleges can enroll different groups of students without spending a dollar more than is necessary.7 At selective colleges, both private and public, the largest discounts go to the students the institution want the most: typically, the highest-achieving applicants, who can help the institutions rise up the rankings and the wealthiest, who even with the tuition break, can boost the schools鈥 bottom line.8 While less affluent students will receive some aid, those dollars are unlikely to come anywhere close to meeting their financial need. As a result, low-income families have little choice but to borrow hefty Parent PLUS loans, which they are often unlikely to be able to repay, to cover those gaps.9

Many selective colleges use financial-aid leveraging strategies for only a subset of their students, and some may use a portion of the additional revenue they receive from recruiting affluent students to boost need-based aid at their institutions. However, the country鈥檚 largest enrollment management firms aggressively market financial aid leveraging or optimization products that are designed to help public and private colleges and universities to use all of their aid to pursue the most desirable prospective students and boost their bottom lines. As EAB, the giant enrollment management consulting company, states in its marketing materials, 鈥淥ur Financial Aid Optimization program ensures that every dollar you commit to aid is used to further your enrollment and net tuition revenue goals.鈥10

Where colleges once used their institutional aid to meet students鈥 financial need, enrollment management industry officials now have a different view of what it should be used for. 鈥淭he concept is to award financial aid in a way that results in the maximum total amount of net tuition revenue for the institution,鈥 Nathan Mueller, the leader of EAB鈥檚 financial aid optimization team, told Higher Ed Dive in 2023.11

One way for a college to use financial aid to increase net revenue is to provide discounts to lure more wealthy students to its campus who, even with the discounts, will ultimately pay more than less advantaged students and have families who may be willing to make substantial donations to the institution. But another way is for the college to encourage a large number of low-income students to enroll and steer their families to Parent PLUS loans, as Baylor did. After all, for colleges, Parent PLUS loans are easy credit they can offer low-income families to cover their funding gaps.12 PLUS loans are readily available, so long as potential borrowers don鈥檛 have bad credit. And because colleges are not held accountable if borrowers go into default on this debt, administrators don鈥檛 have to worry about how hazardous these loans may be for students鈥 families. As a 2019 Urban Institute report stated, the PLUS loan program is 鈥渁 no-strings-attached revenue source for colleges and universities, with the risk shared only by parents and the government,鈥 which loses money if borrowers default.13

Confronted by The Wall Street Journal journalists, Linda Livingstone, Baylor鈥檚 president, acknowledged that her predecessors had acted irresponsibly by enrolling 鈥渟tudents who really couldn鈥檛 afford Baylor.鈥 She pledged to do better. 鈥淢y heart goes out to families that are in that situation,鈥 she told the newspaper. 鈥淲e are working very, very hard to ensure that we don鈥檛 see that so much going forward.鈥14

While Livingstone鈥檚 sympathy provides cold comfort for the families who were encouraged to take on this debt, she has lived up to her promise to make Baylor more affordable for low-income students and their families. Under the new Baylor Benefit Scholarship Program, the university waives tuition and fees for students from families with annual incomes of $50,000 or less.15 The program is paying off, as the retention rate for low-income students at the university has shot up.16

There is a catch, though. In order to afford the tuition waivers, Baylor had to substantially pare back the share of Pell Grant recipients it enrolled, to about 13 percent of its students. The university, however, should never have been enrolling such a large share, Wesley Null, Baylor鈥檚 vice provost for undergraduate education and institutional effectiveness, said during a conference session he led last fall. 鈥淏aylor鈥檚 Pell percentage鈥攜ou go back six or seven years ago鈥攚as crazy high,鈥 Null stated. 鈥湽悠 25 or 26 percent of our undergraduate population were Pell eligible, and we were not serving those students well.鈥17

It would be tempting to take solace in what鈥檚 happening at Baylor. The Wall Street Journal article pushed the university to abandon a destructive policy that harmed low-income students and their families, and to embrace a new policy that made the institution more accessible and affordable for them. However, Baylor is hardly the only university steering low-income families to Parent PLUS loans. In fact, leaving low- and lower-middle-income students with substantial amounts of unmet financial need and encouraging their families to take out Parent PLUS loans is part and parcel of the financial aid leveraging strategies that the giant for-profit enrollment management firms, such as EAB, have been pushing colleges to use in awarding their institutional aid.18

The Wall Street Journal journalists recognized that these practices are widespread. The article led off by stating, 鈥淪ome of the wealthiest U.S. colleges are steering parents into no-limit federal loans to cover rising tuition, leaving many poor and middle-class families with debt they can鈥檛 repay.鈥19 The article cited several other wealthy private universities 鈥渨ith relatively low Parent PLUS repayment rates and high numbers of borrowers from low-income backgrounds,鈥 such as New York University, Syracuse University, Texas Christian University, and the University of Miami.20 But because the article focused almost entirely on Baylor, these other schools did not feel pressure to change their practices. Meanwhile, the private enrollment management firms that market financial aid leveraging products to colleges escaped scrutiny altogether.

By encouraging universities, both private and public, to increase their net revenue by reeling in low-income students and steering their families to Parent PLUS loans, the financial aid leveraging strategies that enrollment management firms like EAB and Ruffalo Noel Levitz market push their clients to engage in a process of predatory inclusion.

Predatory inclusion is when a marginalized group is given access to a service, good, or opportunity, but the conditions of access jeopardize the benefits. As the sociologists Louise Seamster and Rapha毛l Charron-Ch茅nier wrote in 2017:

Processes of predatory inclusion are often presented as providing marginalized individuals with opportunities for social and economic progress. In the long term, however, predatory inclusion reproduces inequality and insecurity for some while allowing already dominant social actors to derive significant profits.21

Sociologists often point to subprime mortgage lending as a premier example of predatory inclusion. Banks long refused to provide mortgages to Black households. In recent decades, a subprime mortgage lending field emerged, offering the promise of homeownership. But the terms and conditions of the mortgages were so punitive that default and foreclosure were almost guaranteed.

In higher education, for-profit colleges, private student loan companies, and online program managers (OPMs)鈥攆or-profit companies that create and manage online courses and programs for public and private colleges and universities鈥攈ave all been accused of engaging in predatory inclusion.22 Financial aid leveraging strategies and products that saddle low-income families with tens of thousands of dollars of debt they are unlikely to be able to repay need to be considered through the same lens. Yes, these universities are providing higher education access to these students, but at the potential cost of financial ruin for their families. That鈥檚 too high a price to pay, particularly given the wealth and power of these institutions.

This report is the first in a three-part series examining these policies and practices. It provides a history of Baylor鈥檚 pursuit of national prominence over the past several decades and shows how those ambitions led the university to embrace financial aid leveraging and put its most marginalized students鈥 families in jeopardy. It also takes a closer look at how Baylor has recently made the institution more affordable for low-income students and their families and suggests that other universities follow its lead.

The second report in the series will examine how widespread these hazardous practices are at both private and public universities. And the third part will offer solutions for reining in the enrollment management industry and making higher education more accessible and affordable for low- and lower-middle-income students and their families.

Baylor is now doing the right thing for its low-income students and families. Other colleges that have been steering these families to Parent PLUS loans should take notice. It shouldn鈥檛 take an expos茅 in a national newspaper to wake them up to the nightmare they are causing.

Citations
  1. Tawnell D. Hobbs and Andrea Fuller, 鈥淗ow Baylor Steered Lower-Income Parents to Debt They Couldn鈥檛 Afford,鈥 The Wall Street Journal, October 13, 2021, .
  2. Hobbs and Fuller, 鈥淗ow Baylor Steered Lower-Income Parents,鈥 .
  3. Rachel Fishman, The Wealth Gap PLUS Debt: How Federal Loans Exacerbate Inequality for Black Families (国产视频, 2016), 6, source.
  4. Naomi Schaefer Riley, 鈥淎t Baylor University, a Struggle Over Mind and Soul,鈥 The New York Times, September 8, 2004, .
  5. Jessica Luther, 鈥淗ow Baylor Happened,鈥 Deadspin, February 5, 2019, .
  6. Ben Gose, 鈥淐olleges Turn to Consultants to Shape the Freshman Class,鈥 The Chronicle of Higher Education, May 7, 1999, .
  7. Gose, 鈥淐olleges Turn to Consultants,鈥 .
  8. Matthew Quirk, 鈥淭he Best Class Money Can Buy,鈥 The Atlantic, November 2005, .
  9. Stephen J. Burd, 鈥淭he Dangerous Game of Financial Aid Leveraging,鈥 in Lifting the Veil on Enrollment Management: How a Powerful Industry Is Limiting Social Mobility in American Higher Education, ed. Stephen J. Burd (Harvard Education Press, 2024), 153鈥173.
  10. EAB, 鈥淪olutions: Financial Aid Optimization,鈥 .
  11. Lilah Burke, 鈥淲hy Colleges Are Using Algorithms to Determine Financial Aid Levels,鈥 Higher Ed Dive, September 5, 2023, .
  12. Fishman, The Wealth Gap PLUS Debt, source.
  13. Sandy Baum, Kristin Blagg, and Rachel Fishman, Reshaping Parent PLUS Loans: Recommendations for Reforming the Parent PLUS Program (Urban Institute, April 2019), 4, .
  14. Hobbs and Fuller, 鈥淗ow Baylor Steered Lower-Income Parents,鈥 .
  15. Baylor University, 鈥淏aylor Benefit Scholarship,鈥 .
  16. Wesley Null (Baylor University vice provost for undergraduate education and institutional effectiveness), in discussions with the author, April 2025.
  17. Wesley Null and Lynn Wisely, 鈥淏aylor University: SEM Change Management, Year 2,鈥 AACRAO鈥檚 Strategic Enrollment Management Conference, Boston, MA, November 5, 2024.
  18. Burd, 鈥淭he Dangerous Game of Financial Aid Leveraging.鈥
  19. Hobbs and Fuller, 鈥淗ow Baylor Steered Lower-Income Parents,鈥 .
  20. Hobbs and Fuller, 鈥淗ow Baylor Steered Lower-Income Parents,鈥 .
  21. Louise Seamster and Rapha毛l Charron-Ch茅nier, 鈥淧redatory Inclusion and Education Debt: Rethinking the Racial Wealth Gap,鈥 Social Currents 4, no. 3 (2017): 200, doi: 10.1177/2329496516686620.
  22. Seamster and Charron-Ch茅nier, 鈥淧redatory Inclusion and Education Debt,鈥 Mapping Exploitation: Examining For-Profit Colleges as Financial Predators in Communities of Color (Student Borrower Protection Center, July 21, 2021), ; and Amber Villalobos, 鈥淥nline College Programs Increasingly Put Black and Hispanic Students at Risk,鈥 The Century Foundation, November 17, 2023, .

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