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Study: Latino Students Use Practical Strategies to Finance College Education

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Study: Latino Students Use Practical Strategies to Finance College Education

Latino students are making pragmatic financial choices to pay for their education, and institutions are increasingly responding with tailored support, according to a comprehensive new report released today by Excelencia in Education.

The report, “How Latinos Pay for College: 2025 National Trends,” builds on two decades of research and reveals that while Latino students demonstrate high financial need, they are employing effective cost-saving measures to make higher education affordable.

“Latinos are representative of a post-traditional student profile and changes in policy will be more impactful if made with the strengths and opportunities to serve this profile of students,” write Deborah A. Santiago, CEO, and Sarita E. Brown, President of Excelencia in Education, in the report’s foreword.

The study found that Latino students, who represent one in five postsecondary students nationwide, are more likely to be first-generation college-goers (51% compared to 22% of white students), come from lower-income households (70% have family incomes below $50,000), and have an expected family contribution (EFC) of zero (45%).

“Latino students make pragmatic choices with what they can control to make college affordable,” said Cassandra Arroyo, a research analyst at Excelencia and co-author of the report.

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To manage costs, Latino students employ multiple strategies: 56% work 30 or more hours weekly while enrolled, 55% attend part-time or mix their enrollment, 81% choose public institutions, and 89% live off-campus or with parents. These tactics represent a clear departure from the traditional college student profile and align with what Excelencia calls “post-traditional” learners.

The data reveals that Latinos rely more heavily on federal financial aid (58%) than state (30%), institutional (23%), or private aid (13%). Perhaps most significantly, Latino students are more than twice as likely to receive grants (67%) than take out loans (27%), indicating a strong preference for aid that doesn’t require repayment.

Yet despite high application rates for aid (85%), Latinos receive the lowest average financial aid among all racial/ethnic groups at $11,004, compared to $15,850 for Asian, $12,937 for White, and $12,365 for African American students.

“Twenty years later, we are revisiting what has changed and what has stayed the same. There has clearly been some progress, but the need to expand access to opportunity remains,” noted Santiago in the report’s foreword, referencing Excelencia’s initial study on Latino financial aid patterns from 2005.

The report also examines differences in aid receipt by institution type. Latino students at public two-year institutions are less likely to receive financial aid (57%) than those at other sectors, especially private institutions (87%). Furthermore, undergraduate Latinos attending private for-profit institutions are more likely to borrow federal loans (60%) compared to those at public two-year institutions (5%).

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Another key finding reveals that Latino students are more likely to receive need-based aid rather than merit-based aid. For state grants, 16% of Latino students received need-based grants compared to only 2% who received merit-only grants.

The report highlights innovative approaches implemented by institutions certified with the Seal of Excelencia. These 46 certified institutions represent less than 1% of all colleges and universities but enroll 17% and graduate 19% of all Latino students nationwide.

Among these institutions, several standout examples emerged. The University of Texas at Austin’s Texas Advance Commitment fully covers tuition for students with family incomes up to $65,000, while Miami Dade College provides “Last Mile Scholarships” for students who left with 13 or fewer credits remaining. Other institutions, like Metropolitan State University of Denver, created emergency retention funds to support students experiencing unexpected financial challenges.

“Leading institutions make choices with what they can control to make college more affordable,” said Emily Labandera, director of research at Excelencia and co-author of the report. “The institutions highlighted in this brief represent a select group of trendsetters that make up the Seal of Excelencia certified institutions that strive to go beyond enrollment to intentionally serve Latino students.”

The report concludes with policy recommendations at institutional, state, and federal levels. These include investing in guaranteed tuition plans by family income, including basic needs in financial aid calculations, prioritizing Pell Grants, and revising the Federal Work-Study distribution formula to better support students with high financial need.

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“Excelencia believes that good policy is informed by good practice,” the authors note, emphasizing that intentionally serving Latino students at scale requires understanding what works to accelerate their success.

With Latino enrollment in postsecondary education projected to increase by 31% by 2030, the findings provide critical insights for institutions and policymakers seeking to create more affordable pathways to degree completion for this growing demographic.

“We firmly believe that disaggregating our data and knowing how Latinos are participating in financial aid informs opportunities to compel action that can more intentionally serve other students as well,” write Santiago and Brown. “And understanding how institutions committed to intentionally serving Latino, and all, students are leveraging financial support to recruit, retain, and advance them to degree completion and connect them to the workforce is an opportunity to leverage and scale their innovation.”

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Finance

Visa Platform Offers Small Businesses Access to Financing, Marketing and Tech Support | PYMNTS.com

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Visa Platform Offers Small Businesses Access to Financing, Marketing and Tech Support | PYMNTS.com

Visa has launched a new platform designed to help small business owners access capital, reach customers and adopt modern business tools.

The Visa & Main platform will continue adding resources, programming and local activations, the company said in a Thursday (Feb. 5) press release emailed to PYMNTS.

“With Visa & Main, we’re connecting Visa’s products and in-house knowledge with the expertise of our clients and partners to provide small businesses with flexible financing opportunities and customer acquisition and technology support,” Kim Lawrence, regional president of North America at Visa, said in the release. “It’s a platform built to meet small business owners where they are — in our local neighborhoods and at community events across the country.”

To expand small business owners’ access to financing, Visa has launched a $100 million working capital facility with community-focused lender Lendistry. Visa & Main will add more grant opportunities and financial support programs in the coming months, according to the release.

To help entrepreneurs reach more customers, the platform offers marketing support, signage, digital guides, workshops and other resources, the Thursday press release said. Resources will be available for both everyday marketing and big events that may come to the small business owner’s town.

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To assist small businesses with their digital transformation, Visa & Main will provide training for, and easier access to, digital payment acceptance tools, expense management and money-movement capabilities, risk and fraud-mitigation solutions, and digital enablement and financial education support, per the release. The platform will also include everyday savings programs and offers.

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The PYMNTS Intelligence report “Global Digital Shopping Index: SMB Edition,” which was commissioned by Visa, found that small and medium-sized businesses (SMBs) are 45% less likely to offer a seamless cross-channel shopping experience than large merchants.

SMBs also offer eight fewer digital shopping features, on average, than large merchants, even though shoppers want to use the same digital shopping features regardless of channel or merchant size.

Visa & Main joins several other programs the company introduced to help businesses in a variety of sectors. Visa said in November that it is investing in, and providing specialized financial tools and resources to, content creators. The company said it aims to help creators scale their businesses locally and globally.

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Major bank ‘really sorry’ over email to customers as Aussies slugged from tomorrow

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Major bank ‘really sorry’ over email to customers as Aussies slugged from tomorrow
ME Bank has been the quickest to pass on the rate hike, but it made an awkward ‘error’ when telling customers yesterday. (Source: TikTok/Supplied/Getty)

An Australian bank has apologised to its customers after telling them it was “pleased” to swiftly pass on the RBA’s latest rate hike this week. ME Bank is among the quickest lenders to pass on the interest rake hike, with customers to start incurring the higher level of interest from Saturday.

Understandably, most customers did not welcome the news. A sentiment that the was perhaps compounded by the bank’s cheery tone and apparent delight.

While a rate hike was widely predicted by the market and economists, ME Bank’s team apparently weren’t quite as prepared, seemingly using the same correspondence from the previous rate cuts last year.

On Wednesday night shortly after 9pm, the bank again emailed customers saying it was “really sorry” about the correspondence and any confusion it caused.

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“This email was sent in error, and does not reflect ME’s commitment to communicate to you with clarity and empathy.

“We understand that rates increases can be challenging, and we’re here to support you.”

The mea culpa came five hours after the bank’s initial correspondence, with plenty of customers taking to social media to poke fun at the gaffe, with some even claiming it was enough for them to think about switching lenders.

Yahoo Finance contacted ME Bank to ask about the error.

Most major lenders will not start charging the higher level of interest until late next week, or the week after, according to an extensive roundup from consumer group Finder.

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ME Bank customers will be among the earliest to be subject to the higher rate when it takes effect from Saturday, February 7.

Borrowers with BOQ, which owns ME Bank, will be hit from tomorrow, February 6.

ING Bank customers will be effected from Tuesday, February 10.

ANZ, Commonwealth Bank and NAB customers will be impacted from Friday, February 13. The same day as Bankwest and Suncorp customers.

Westpac borrowers will see their interest increased a few days later on February 17. Some of the other subsidiaries of the Big Four lenders will also pass it on that day, including St George, Bank of Melbourne and Bank SA. It’s the same date for Teachers Mutual and Uni Bank.

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Meanwhile Macquarie Bank will pass it on from February 20.

A majority of mortgage borrowers didn’t reduce their payments after the recent rate cuts, so the RBA’s move this week might not cool the economy to the degree it wants. For that reason, forecasters are predicting further rate hikes to come for borrowers this year.

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Finance

Climate Finance

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Climate Finance
The transition and adaptation financing gap in low- and lower-middle-income countries is a focus of multiple international forums. Developed economies may have resources to plan and prepare, but the global energy transition cannot successfully happen without developing and emerging economies.
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