ABA Report Calls for Action to Help Young Lawyers Struggling with Student Loans

A study released this week by the Young Lawyers Division of the American Bar Association (ABA) shows that student debt is impacting law graduates’ lives and mental health. The survey, which included responses from 1,084 law school graduates from the last ten years, found that not only are almost all law school graduates impacted by student loan debt, but that it affects them personally and professionally. The study also found that lawyers of color were disproportionately impacted.

Just over 95 percent of survey respondents took out student loans for law school and more than 90 percent of respondents graduated from law school with at least $65,000 in student debt. The mean loan balance post-JD was $164,742, which includes undergraduate loan balances averaging $17,512. Notably, while about a quarter of white respondents hold over $200,000 in debt at graduation, this proportion increases to at least one third among Asian, Black, Hispanic, and Multiracial respondents.

For many, these loans also grow over time, with the reported current mean loan balance ($171,036) slightly higher than the mean at graduation. Most respondents reported that their loans were higher or the same as they were at graduation; 40.4 percent of respondents reported higher and 11.7 percent said the same. Among Black respondents, however, a staggering 67 percent reported higher debt now than at graduation. Even among the more tenured lawyers, those who graduated before 2014, 45.4 percent have higher levels of student debt currently than at graduation. Though the report acknowledges that there may be reasons explaining the increased debt, including strategic repayment plans, loan forgiveness plans, and/or unemployment, it illustrates the structural burden of such high debt.

Almost all respondents, 89.8 percent, reported making at least one personal decision based on debt. Over half of those surveyed postponed or opted not to take a vacation (58.3 percent) or postponed or decided not to buy a house (55.6 percent). More significantly, almost half of respondents, 48 percent, postponed or decided not to have children due to their debt, while about 28.8 percent postponed or decided not to get married.

Professionally, 37 percent chose a job that paid more money over a job that they really wanted, and 33.5 percent took a different career than originally expected. Among those lawyers working as corporate counsel or in private practice, over 40 percent (43.2 and 42.1 respectively) said that they took a job that pays more instead of a job that they really wanted. Similarly, large proportions of those working in government/military and public sector/non-profit (63.8 percent and 50.9 percent respectively) chose a job that qualified them for loan forgiveness over a job that they really wanted. 

Perhaps most importantly, the report calls out the emergence of mental health as a theme in the responses of survey participants, despite participants not being prompted to discuss their mental health. The survey included an open-ended question that asked how student debt has impacted respondents’ lives, and the responses consistently mentioned stress, anxiety, mental wellness, depression, and anger. The report summary noted that the responses were “jarring” in both content as well as the frequency in which mental health and related issues were mentioned.

The ABA calls the report “a call to action” and urges a new approach to student loan advocacy, stating that if changes are not made soon, entering the profession could become cost prohibitive.