The post These Billionaires Are Stepping Up As Student Loan Cuts Squeeze HBCUs appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Historically Black colleges and universities are on the frontlines of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act’s new limits on parent and graduate student loans. Philanthropists could help fill the gap. Antonio Sweeney relied on a mix of private and school scholarships, plus a federal Pell Grant for low income students, to pay for his first two years at his dream school, Morehouse College, in Atlanta, the alma mater of Sen. Raphael Warnock (D-Georgia) and Martin Luther King Jr. But by junior year, most of the outside scholarship money was used up and he had taken on so many activities–from serving as class president to running his own side businesses–that he hadn’t earned enough credits to keep his Morehouse academic scholarship. He filled the gap that year by taking out federal and private student loans. Now, in his senior year, his mother has come to the rescue–she borrowed $24,419 this fall from the federal Parent Plus program and plans to tap a similar amount for the spring semester. “We’re almost at the finish line and if this is what needed to be done for him to complete his education, then as a parent, I’m willing to do it,’’ says Sylvia Tripplett, a Flint, Michigan special education teacher still paying off her own student loans. Sweeney and Tripplett shared their story with Forbes for a good reason: As part of President Donald Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA), beginning next July 1, new Parent Plus borrowers will be limited to $20,000 per school year (and $65,000 over a student’s school career). “It’s going to force families to have to decide to tell their kids, ‘hey, we don’t have enough money for you to go to your dream school,’” worries Sweeney. They’re not the only ones thinking about the problems students at… The post These Billionaires Are Stepping Up As Student Loan Cuts Squeeze HBCUs appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Historically Black colleges and universities are on the frontlines of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act’s new limits on parent and graduate student loans. Philanthropists could help fill the gap. Antonio Sweeney relied on a mix of private and school scholarships, plus a federal Pell Grant for low income students, to pay for his first two years at his dream school, Morehouse College, in Atlanta, the alma mater of Sen. Raphael Warnock (D-Georgia) and Martin Luther King Jr. But by junior year, most of the outside scholarship money was used up and he had taken on so many activities–from serving as class president to running his own side businesses–that he hadn’t earned enough credits to keep his Morehouse academic scholarship. He filled the gap that year by taking out federal and private student loans. Now, in his senior year, his mother has come to the rescue–she borrowed $24,419 this fall from the federal Parent Plus program and plans to tap a similar amount for the spring semester. “We’re almost at the finish line and if this is what needed to be done for him to complete his education, then as a parent, I’m willing to do it,’’ says Sylvia Tripplett, a Flint, Michigan special education teacher still paying off her own student loans. Sweeney and Tripplett shared their story with Forbes for a good reason: As part of President Donald Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA), beginning next July 1, new Parent Plus borrowers will be limited to $20,000 per school year (and $65,000 over a student’s school career). “It’s going to force families to have to decide to tell their kids, ‘hey, we don’t have enough money for you to go to your dream school,’” worries Sweeney. They’re not the only ones thinking about the problems students at…

These Billionaires Are Stepping Up As Student Loan Cuts Squeeze HBCUs

2025/10/16 19:32

Historically Black colleges and universities are on the frontlines of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act’s new limits on parent and graduate student loans. Philanthropists could help fill the gap.


Antonio Sweeney relied on a mix of private and school scholarships, plus a federal Pell Grant for low income students, to pay for his first two years at his dream school, Morehouse College, in Atlanta, the alma mater of Sen. Raphael Warnock (D-Georgia) and Martin Luther King Jr. But by junior year, most of the outside scholarship money was used up and he had taken on so many activities–from serving as class president to running his own side businesses–that he hadn’t earned enough credits to keep his Morehouse academic scholarship. He filled the gap that year by taking out federal and private student loans. Now, in his senior year, his mother has come to the rescue–she borrowed $24,419 this fall from the federal Parent Plus program and plans to tap a similar amount for the spring semester. “We’re almost at the finish line and if this is what needed to be done for him to complete his education, then as a parent, I’m willing to do it,’’ says Sylvia Tripplett, a Flint, Michigan special education teacher still paying off her own student loans.

Sweeney and Tripplett shared their story with Forbes for a good reason: As part of President Donald Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA), beginning next July 1, new Parent Plus borrowers will be limited to $20,000 per school year (and $65,000 over a student’s school career). “It’s going to force families to have to decide to tell their kids, ‘hey, we don’t have enough money for you to go to your dream school,’” worries Sweeney.

They’re not the only ones thinking about the problems students at historically Black colleges and universities (HBCUs) have had financing their studies.

On Monday, the family foundation of Arthur Blank, the owner of the Atlanta Falcons and cofounder of Home Depot, committed $50 million over the next 10 years to “gap” scholarships for students at four Atlanta HBCUs. The grants are meant to fill financial shortfalls left after students have exhausted all their other scholarship, grant and loan options and will go mostly to juniors and seniors who might otherwise drop out for lack of funds. Blank had made smaller gifts to the schools before, for specific infrastructure or sports. But in an email to Forbes he explained that, “through conversations with the college presidents, we continued to hear promising students were leaving school not because they couldn’t do the work, but because they hit a financial wall. These aren’t students who lack talent or ambition, but there is a gap between what aid they’ve received and what they actually need to stay enrolled and graduate.” Blank added that while he’s aware of the “broader conversations around student debt and borrowing,” the gift isn’t a response to that, but to the needs of “real students in our community.”

Meanwhile, private equity billionaire Robert F. Smith is planning to expand his Student Freedom Initiative, which now makes low cost loans to HBCU undergraduates, to graduate students, who will be hit by OBBBA’s new limits on graduate student loans. And in September, MacKenzie Scott, a novelist, philanthropist and former wife of Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, made a $70 million gift to the United Negro College Fund (UNCF) to help build endowments for its 37 member private HBCUs. Scott, Smith and Blank are all Forbes 400 members and signatories of the Giving Pledge, a commitment from some of the world’s richest individuals to give away the majority of their wealth during their lifetimes or in their wills.

Chronically underfunded for decades, the nation’s 107 HBCUs and their students rely heavily on federal loans. In 2019-2020, 65% of HBCU undergraduates took out federal loans and 18% had parents who tapped Plus loans, compared to 36% of students borrowing and just 4% of parents borrowing for undergraduates as a whole.

The new parental borrowing limits present a particular problem for the nation’s elite private HBCUs, which have high price tags, but lack the rich endowments of a Princeton, Yale or MIT. Indeed, three of the four schools Blank’s money will go to–Morehouse, Spelman College and Clark Atlanta University–ranked among the 10 schools in the nation with the highest percentage of students relying on Parent Plus loans, according to a 2022 analysis by Peter Granville of the Century Foundation. A Forbes analysis of 2022-2023 data provided by Century showed that at Spelman, 40% to 45% of students’ parents borrow, with an average outstanding Parent Plus loan balance of nearly $80,000–the second highest dollar debt in the nation after New York University, where only 10% to 20% of parents borrow.


Mark Brown, president and CEO of Alabama’s Tuskegee University, has mixed feelings about the federal student loan program. He’s fought to preserve access to the loans, including Parent Plus, that make it possible for the majority of the HBCU’s students to graduate. Yet he believes the creation of Parent Plus was a mistake—and, he tells Forbes, one that “we’ve become dependent on.”

During Trump’s first term, Brown, a retired Air Force general, served as chief operating officer of the Department of Education’s Office of Federal Student Aid and saw up close how Plus loans could devastate families. Created in 1980 for parents too well-off to qualify for other financial aid, Plus Loans evolved, as college costs soared, into a way for poor parents to fill in the aid gaps. These loans aren’t cheap–they currently carry an interest rate of 8.94%, with an onerous origination fee of 4.228%. But so long as they don’t have serious delinquencies or defaults, tax liens or bankruptcies, even parents with low incomes and credit scores have been able to borrow any undergraduate college costs not covered by other aid. Paying back is another matter. Granville’s analysis identified 68 schools where 10% or fewer of Parent Plus borrowers had been able to pay down any principal after three years of payments; 59 of those schools were HBCUs.

With a maximum Pell grant of $7,395 (that’s just 17% of the average tuition and fees at a four-year private school) and the amount undergraduates can borrow themselves from Uncle Sam limited, Parent Plus has become a last resort for families of limited means. “We’ll be excluding people who are otherwise qualified for the education and can be contributors nationally to our needs,” Brown says.

It’s unclear how many families will have needs that exceed the new loan limits, but changes to Parent Plus over a decade ago provide a potential window into what could be on the horizon. In 2011, President Barack Obama’s Department of Education tightened credit standards for the program, leading to a 46% drop in the share of families at HBCUs with Plus loans and an enrollment decline of 3.4% at the schools, research from the Education Department’s Institute of Education Sciences shows. The government later relaxed the requirements.

“What people have to realize is that any minor tweak to the Parent Plus loan system, no matter how well intentioned, could have drastic implications,” says the Century Foundation’s Jordan Nellums, a senior policy associate.

Mark Brown, president and CEO of Tuskegee University, is concerned recent student loan changes could limit the talent pipeline.

Tuskegee University

Another problem for Tuskegee: the looming end of Grad Plus, which had allowed graduate students to borrow their full costs. Masters and PhD students beginning their studies after July 1, 2026 will be limited to borrowing $20,500 per year (and $100,000 in all), while those in medical, dental, veterinary and law schools will be limited to $50,000 annually (and $200,000 in all).

Tuskegee’s College of Veterinary Medicine, where around 60 new students will start next fall, is the only one of the nation’s 33 accredited veterinary schools affiliated with an HBCU. Yet over 70% of the country’s Black veterinarians graduated from the school founded by Booker T. Washington. (HBCUs also have educated 40% of Black engineers in the U.S. and 70% of Black doctors.)

Up to half of Tuskegee’s future veterinary students could face problems paying for their education with the elimination of Grad Plus, Brown says. The average debt for its graduating students is $280,000. “I think economically, it’s a bad decision because there are some majors and some needs in terms of skill sets, especially in a country that appears to want to turn within for talent,” he says. “You have to have a pipeline for that.”

Brown says the school is trying to raise an additional $32 million to bring its endowment to $200 million to expand institutional aid for its students. Given Tuskegee’s enrollment of around 3,300 students, that would work out to under $61,000 per student. By contrast, the wealthiest private schools have endowments exceeding $2 million per student. Typically, nearly half the dollars college endowments dole out each year goes to student aid.

Both Tuskegee and its students also stand to benefit from UNCF’s current $1 billion capital campaign–the one billionaire Scott just gave a big boost to with her $70 million. UNCF is already the second-largest private provider of scholarships in the U.S. “We have to find the policy sweet spot so that all of these students can get access without being saddled (with debt) for the rest of their lives,” says Lodriguez Murray, UNCF’s senior vice president for public policy and government affairs.


A few years before Sweeney started at Morehouse, Robert F. Smith, founder and CEO of Vista Equity Partners, packed a surprise into his commencement address there: He’d be wiping out the debt of an entire graduating class. Smith followed up that one-time $34 million gift by donating $50 million directly and $50 million from his Fund II Foundation to launch the Student Freedom Initiative, which has also gotten $150 million from Cisco. The initiative now provides loans of up to $20,000 per year ($40,000 total) to sophomores, juniors and seniors at more than 70 HBCUs, minority-serving institutions and tribal colleges, charging interest two percentage points below the Parent Plus rate. The nonprofit doesn’t conduct a credit check, require a cosigner or charge origination fees—all of which can be barriers to students getting private loans. Instead, it’s making a bet on students’ future earnings–it has so far directed about $24 million in loans to students in what President and CEO Keith Shoates describes as “market-driven” majors like finance and STEM (science, technology, engineering and mathematics). Smith chairs the initiative and Tuskegee’s Brown sits on its board.

Student Freedom plans to launch a pilot program for HBCU graduate students in the 2029 academic year, when the elimination of Grad Plus will start to be felt most acutely by students and institutions, since current students are grandfathered in. It will start by allowing students in a select group of medical, dental and pharmacy schools to borrow $30,000 each year for four years.

With the coming restrictions on Parent Plus, Shoates also expects more demand for its undergraduate loans–but how much the organization can dole out depends on the additional amount it can raise from donors and what student borrowers repay into its revolving fund.

“What we care about is this bridge to the middle class, and that bridge to the middle class still tends to be education,” Shoates tells Forbes. “And so we want to make sure we stay true to that in terms of how that wealth trap called student debt precludes people from fully funding their retirement plans or buying their first home or starting a family.”

More from Forbes

ForbesTrump Is Slashing Grad School Loans. These Companies Are Scrambling To Step InForbesThese 25 Universities Will Take A Big Hit From Trump’s H-1B Visa AttackForbesHow To Choose A College In Trump’s AmericaForbesWhy Applications To Historically Black Colleges Are SurgingForbesTurning 80, United Negro College Fund Stages A Revival

Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/daniellechemtob/2025/10/16/these-billionaires-are-stepping-up-as-hbcus-are-squeezed-by-student-loan-cuts/

Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact service@support.mexc.com for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.
Share Insights

You May Also Like

On-chain fee report for the first half of 2025: 1,124 protocols achieved profitability, with revenue exceeding $20 billion.

On-chain fee report for the first half of 2025: 1,124 protocols achieved profitability, with revenue exceeding $20 billion.

Author: 1kx network Compiled by: Tim, PANews 1kx has released its most comprehensive on-chain revenue report to date for the crypto market: the "1kx On-Chain Revenue Report (First Half of 2025)". The report compiles verified on-chain fee data from over 1,200 protocols, clearly depicting user payment paths, value flows, and the core factors driving growth. Why are on-chain fees so important? Because this is the most direct signal of genuine payment demand: On-chain ecosystem = open, global, and has investment value Off-chain ecosystem = restricted, mature Data comparison reveals development trends: on-chain application fees increased by 126% year-on-year, while off-chain fees only increased by 15%. How large is the market? In 2020, on-chain activity was still in the experimental stage, but by 2025 it will have developed into a real-time measurable $20 billion economy. Users are paying for hundreds of application scenarios: transactions, buying and selling, data storage, cross-application collaboration, and we have counted 1,124 protocols that have achieved on-chain profitability this year. How are the fees generated? DeFi remains a core pillar, contributing 63% of total fees, but the industry landscape is rapidly evolving: The wallet business (which surged 260% year-on-year) has transformed the user interface into a profit center. Consumer apps (200% growth) directly monetize user traffic. DePIN (which surged 400%) brings computing power and connectivity services onto the blockchain. Does the on-chain economy truly exist? Although the total cost did not exceed the 2021 peak, the ecological health is stronger than before: At that time, on-chain fees accounted for over 40% of ETH transactions; now, transaction costs have decreased by 86%. The number of profitable agreements increased eightfold. Token holders' dividends hit a record high What are the core driving factors? The asset price determines the on-chain fees denominated in USD, which is in line with expectations, but the following should be noted: Price fluctuations trigger seasonal cycles 21 years later, application costs and valuations show a strong causal relationship (increased costs drive up valuations). The influence of on-chain factors in specific tracks is significant. Who is the winner? The top 20 protocols account for 70% of the total fees, but the rankings change frequently, as no industry can be disrupted as rapidly as the crypto space. The top 5 are: meteora, jito, jupitter, raydium, and solana. A discrepancy exists between expenses and valuation: Although application-based projects dominate expense generation, their market capitalization share has remained almost unchanged. Why is this? The market's valuation logic for application-based projects is similar to that for traditional enterprises: DeFi has a price-to-earnings ratio of about 17 times, while public chains have a valuation as high as 3900 times, which reflects additional narrative value (store of value, national-level infrastructure, etc.). What are the future trends for on-chain fees? Our baseline forecast shows that on-chain fees will exceed $32 billion in 2026, representing a year-on-year increase of 63%, primarily driven by the application layer. RWA, DePIN, wallets, and consumer applications are entering a period of accelerated development, while L1 fees will gradually stabilize as scaling technology continues to advance. Driven by favorable regulations, we believe this marks the beginning of the crypto industry's maturity phase: application scale, fee revenue, and value distribution will eventually advance in tandem. Full version: https://1kx.io/writing/2025-onchain-revenue-report
Share
PANews2025/10/31 16:43
IP Hits $11.75, HYPE Climbs to $55, BlockDAG Surpasses Both with $407M Presale Surge!

IP Hits $11.75, HYPE Climbs to $55, BlockDAG Surpasses Both with $407M Presale Surge!

The post IP Hits $11.75, HYPE Climbs to $55, BlockDAG Surpasses Both with $407M Presale Surge! appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Crypto News 17 September 2025 | 18:00 Discover why BlockDAG’s upcoming Awakening Testnet launch makes it the best crypto to buy today as Story (IP) price jumps to $11.75 and Hyperliquid hits new highs. Recent crypto market numbers show strength but also some limits. The Story (IP) price jump has been sharp, fueled by big buybacks and speculation, yet critics point out that revenue still lags far behind its valuation. The Hyperliquid (HYPE) price looks solid around the mid-$50s after a new all-time high, but questions remain about sustainability once the hype around USDH proposals cools down. So the obvious question is: why chase coins that are either stretched thin or at risk of retracing when you could back a network that’s already proving itself on the ground? That’s where BlockDAG comes in. While other chains are stuck dealing with validator congestion or outages, BlockDAG’s upcoming Awakening Testnet will be stress-testing its EVM-compatible smart chain with real miners before listing. For anyone looking for the best crypto coin to buy, the choice between waiting on fixes or joining live progress feels like an easy one. BlockDAG: Smart Chain Running Before Launch Ethereum continues to wrestle with gas congestion, and Solana is still known for network freezes, yet BlockDAG is already showing a different picture. Its upcoming Awakening Testnet, set to launch on September 25, isn’t just a demo; it’s a live rollout where the chain’s base protocols are being stress-tested with miners connected globally. EVM compatibility is active, account abstraction is built in, and tools like updated vesting contracts and Stratum integration are already functional. Instead of waiting for fixes like other networks, BlockDAG is proving its infrastructure in real time. What makes this even more important is that the technology is operational before the coin even hits exchanges. That…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 00:32