Billionaire stuns class with plan to pay off their $US40m loan debt
Atlanta: A billionaire technology investor has stunned the entire graduating class at a US university when he announced at their commencement he would pay off their student loans, estimated at $US40 million ($A58 million).
Robert F. Smith, left, laughs with David Thomas, center, and actress Angela Bassett at Morehouse College.Credit:AP
The announcement immediately drew stunned looks from faculty and students alike. Then the graduates broke into the biggest cheers of the morning. Morehouse said it is the single largest gift to the college.
Smith, who received an honorary doctorate from Morehouse during the ceremony, had already announced a $US1.5 million gift to the school. The pledge to eliminate student debt for the class of 2019 is estimated to be $US40 million.
Smith said he expected the recipients to "pay it forward" and said he hoped that "every class has the same opportunity going forward".
"Because we are enough to take care of our own community," Smith said. "We are enough to ensure that we have all the opportunities of the American dream. And we will show it to each other through our actions and through our words and through our deeds."
In the weeks before graduating from Morehouse on Sunday, 22-year-old finance major Aaron Mitchom drew up a spreadsheet to calculate how long it would take him to pay back his $US200,000 in student loans – 25 years at half his monthly salary, per his calculations.
In an instant, that number vanished. Mitchom, sitting in the crowd, wept.
His mother, Tina Mitchom, was also shocked. Eight family members, including Mitchom's 76-year-old grandmother, took turns over four years co-signing on the loans that got him across the finish line.
"It takes a village," she said. "It now means he can start paying it forward and start closing this gap a lot sooner, giving back to the college and thinking about a succession plan" for his younger siblings.
Morehouse College president David A. Thomas said the gift would have a profound effect on the students' futures.
"Many of my students are interested in going into teaching, for example, but leave with an amount of student debt that makes that untenable," Thomas said. "In some ways, it was a liberation gift for these young men that just opened up their choices."
AP
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