The first federal student loan program was a response to Sputnik, not to education.
The National Defense Education Act of 1958 created the first federally funded student loan program in the United States. Congress did not pass the legislation because students needed help paying for college. It passed because the Soviet Union launched Sputnik in October 1957, and the perceived gap in scientific talent between the two superpowers created a national security panic.1
The NDEA provided low-interest loans to students pursuing degrees in science, mathematics, engineering, and foreign languages, fields deemed essential to Cold War competition. Half the loan was forgiven for graduates who became public school teachers for five years.2
Before 1958, paying for higher education was primarily a private matter. The GI Bill of 1944 covered tuition for returning veterans but was not a loan program. Families saved, students worked, and tuition at public universities was low enough that debt was rarely necessary.3
The Higher Education Act of 1965, signed by Lyndon Johnson, expanded access dramatically by creating the Guaranteed Student Loan Program, allowing middle-income families to borrow for college for the first time with federal backing.4
Total outstanding student loan debt in the United States reached 1.77 trillion dollars by early 2024, held by approximately 43 million borrowers.5 Average tuition at four-year public universities increased by more than 1,200% between 1980 and 2020, adjusted for inflation, far outpacing growth in median household income over the same period.6