What It Was Like To Be Poor In The Ivy League – The Finance Twins (2024)

Being an identical twin, I got used to standing out a little more than the average person as a child. An ordinary walk around the grocery store would often lead to strangers pointing at us. We looked so similar as kids that we had to wear nametags to kindergarten so our teacher could tell us apart.

On top of that, growing up in a relatively hom*ogenous town in Minnesota as a Latinx immigrant, it was easy to feel different. But while it’s hard to think of things more isolating than growing up in poverty, one thing comes to mind: Being a poor minority student in the Ivy League. It not easy feeling like you are the only person there who didn’t come from a wealthy family. After working tirelessly throughout my childhood to get above a 4.0GPA in high school, it took a toll on my psyche to feel like I still didn’t belong.

When most people think about the typical college experience they often think of cheap meals like ramen, late nights partying, and some studying. But life on an ivy league campus isn’t your average college experience. Not even close.

But my time there wasn’t easy. The academics were the least of my worries.

I shared a bedroom with my twin brother my entire life until I left home in Minnesota at eighteen years old to attend the Wharton School of Business at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia. It’s part of the fabled ivy league, which includes 8 of the most prestigious universities in the world, and is widely considered as the best undergraduate business school in the world. I arrived alone with my entire life packed into a single suitcase because that was all I could afford to bring with me on the flight to the East Coast.

My high-interest savings account had a few hundred bucks from my summer job, which was somehow supposed to last me the school year. Being broke prepared me to share a bedroom and share a cramped space with a roommate, but it didn’t prepare me for anything else.

Not having enough money to cover the taxi ride to Penn, I took public transit from the airport, which dropped me off a few blocks from campus. As I walked up to the outside of my dorm, the realization that most of the other students were being dropped off by their entire family hit me like a ton of bricks to the chest. I hadn’t even been in my adopted city for more than an hour, and I already missed the warm embrace of my mom and the comforting presence of my two brothers. I was embarrassed that no one was able to come and drop me off, and I was worried my new classmates might wonder whether I was loved by my family or not, even though I knew my mom and brothers would have given anything to be there with me.

I tried to hide the tears as my roommate’s parents helped him quickly unpack and set up his half of the room before they left to go shopping for more things, while I quickly stuffed my clothes in the tall dresser designated for me. Later in the day, one of my hallmate’s parents noticed that I was alone and kindly asked if I wanted to join their family for dinner. A voice in my head was screaming at me to say yes, but I nervously said I should stay and finish settling in. The truth was I was embarrassed and didn’t want to have to answer questions about why my family wasn’t there.

What It Was Like To Be Poor In The Ivy League – The Finance Twins (1)

Graduating from Penn, an Ivy League university, changed the trajectory of my life.

If it sounds like I am complaining about having gone to an Ivy League university, let me make a few things clear. No other single experience or community has more profoundly affected my life positively. It even changed my children’s trajectory as well. Going to Harvard and Penn allowed me to go from being a Latinx immigrant, raised in poverty, in a single-parent household, to earning more than 6 figures in my first job out of college. My. First. Job. Even writing that feels silly to someone who grew with a household income that bounced around the poverty line. Going to those schools opened doors to me that were never open to my parents. It opened doors that are closed to most people.

The fact that I was able to attend a university with a financial aid policy that said that students who come from families that earn less than $100,000 per year could attend for free is not lost on me. The thought that I received a degree that cost a quarter of a million dollars still gives me chills. The profound impact my college degree has made on my life has been nothing short of mind-numbing. I am one of the lucky ones. But it wasn’t all rainbows and sunshine, and I learned a few lessons about money along the way.

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At first, I thought the move-in weekend was a car show.

I vividly remember wondering if the German automobile industry was sponsoring my university’s move-in weekend. The procession of proud parents entering to drop off their children for college seemed to indicate that you could only participate if you were driving a Mercedes, BMW, or Audi — cars that I was familiar with from TV. The cars were all stuffed to the brim with mini-refrigerators, televisions, bean bag chairs, and other items that I definitely could not afford. It was a far cry from the suitcase I lugged into my dorm by myself.

But it wasn’t the huge amounts of bags and gear that everyone else was hastily bringing onto campus that left a lasting impression. As I mentioned earlier, it was easily the fact that entire families were there to drop off their children at college. I couldn’t wrap my head around how my fellow freshmen from across the world were able to have their entire families there with them. Those flights alone must have cost thousands of dollars.

Throughout the semester, I met the children of celebrities, hedge fund managers, and other titans of industry. I also met other students who came from backgrounds more similar to mine, and some who came from even rougher backgrounds than I did. Broken homes, victims of abuse, and even homelessness. But meeting people that I could relate to seemed nearly impossible.

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I was embarrassed and felt the need to lie about being poor…

Birthday celebrations for my friends often included trips to restaurants off-campus. But I never had the cash to spare for a meal that wasn’t included in the campus dining plan, so I always had to come up with an excuse for why I was unable to attend the birthday festivities. Being poor when surrounded by people who aren’t poor, ultimately forces you to come up with lies or excuses as to why you are too busy to join for costly outings. Mostly, out of fear that they won’t want to be friends if they know the truth. I also had a healthy dose of shame, as if it were my fault I was poor.

Seeing my hallmates go on these outings was painful, and I wondered what it’d be like to try sushi or Indian food for the first time. Spring break often involved exotic trips abroad and winter break trips to the Rockies to hit the slopes and rub elbows with the rich and famous. Something I had only ever seen in movies. But my school breaks consisted of going home to Minnesota and working to earn extra money.

Am I hoping to get your sympathy? No, because I realize that many people currently face this reality. I had a credit card (which I opened on my eighteenth birthday in order to begin to establish credit and increase my credit score) so I could always have said yes to my friends and lived beyond my non-existent means, but I was sick of being poor and wanted to do everything I could to try to change that. During that time, there wasn’t a single month where I carried a balance on my credit card.

… But I knew living beyond my means would only make things worse.

I also could have borrowed thousands of dollars in student loans to give myself more breathing room, but it never felt like a good option since I knew I’d need any money I’d make after college available in case my mom or siblings had a financial emergency. I had seen creditors harass my mom, and I could think of nothing sweeter than to one day be able to tell them to stop calling because we had already paid.

When my freshman roommate asked me why my mom never visited me at college, I told him that she just didn’t have the time to visit since she was constantly working. While that was true, since my mom really was always working around the clock, the real reason she never visited was that she just never had the money. So, instead, we were forced to speak on the phone to stay in touch.

Today, we still talk on the phone daily, a ritual from not being able to see each other in those trying early college years. This taught me that distance and financial difficulties are not good enough excuses to let relationships fall by the wayside, but rather a reminder to foster those relationships and make them even stronger. It is those relationships that will buoy you during your darkest moments. My brothers and I finally bought her a plane ticket so she could see me graduate 4 years later. It was her first vacation in over a decade.

Even though I had something in common with all of my classmates, I only seemed to notice the ways in which I was different.

On the first day of classes, amongst all the guys wearing Sperry boat shoes and women sporting Longchamp bags and Lululemon leggings, I felt like I was the only student who didn’t have a trendy new outfit. Did I somehow miss the memo about the unofficial dress code? Surely, everyone else had coordinated their outfits. When you can’t afford those things, you become hyper-aware of everything you have, and even more aware of the things you don’t have.

Today, it’s easy for me to take a step back and realize that comparing myself to others is the fastest path to misery, but as an eighteen-year-old thrust into a foreign place with peers who seemingly had it all figured out, it was basically impossible to avoid it. I was an outsider, and I knew it. I didn’t look like them. And I definitely didn’t feel like them or sound like them. I had been poor my entire life but never felt as poor as when I was surrounded by people who seemingly never had to worry about money. I started college in 2007, the relatively early days of Facebook, so I can’t imagine what it must be like now, with Instagram being the museum of choice on which to display the rosy perfect life that no one actually has.

But then I realized everyone struggles with their own problems. Even people who seem to have it all.

While I felt like the rest of my classmates were lucky to have attended prestigious private high schools and boarding schools, I was surprised to see that they were also stressed about pending midterms, papers, and exams. Their lives weren’t as perfect or easy as I had thought. I think about the classmate who grew up in an exclusive Southern California community and would travel to and from boarding school on the family’s private jet. He confided in me that he was having a hard time adjusting to college, the last thing I’d thought we’d have in common. It was during these years that I began to realize money can’t buy happiness. Money is incredibly important and not having it can lead to misery, but it won’t solve all of your problems. I learned that lesson the hard way, but I am glad I did.

As I compared my childhood to the stories I heard from my peers of parents who were too wrapped up in their careers to give them attention, it dawned on me that the traditional definition of success might not be what I expected. It wasn’t easy losing my dad to cancer when I was only seven, and I still remember seeing all of the other dads on the sideline of the soccer field and wishing I had my dad there to cheer for me. But I will always be grateful that our mom showered us with love and attention whenever she was home with us, something that many of my classmates couldn’t say.

Obviously there were some classmates who were wealthy, had amazing families, didn’t have family issues, and were truly incredible human beings, but that wasn’t the case for the average person I met.

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As I got ready to graduate, I was blinded by money. And I learned I already had the most important things.

As graduation approached, I was lucky to have landed what was then my dream job of working in investment banking on Wall Street. Lured by the money, I had a general idea of what I’d be doing, but even more important to me at the time, I knew I’d be getting paid a lot. Enough to help my mom pay some of her monthly bills and still be able to save. Naively, I thought I’d be making enough to never have to worry about money again, but New York City has a funny way of making even rich people feel broke.

Now that several years have passed, I can look back and reflect on the way I struggled with the shame and embarrassment of being poor at an Ivy League university. Was the experience worth it? Definitely. I grew an incredible amount during my four years on Penn’s campus. I learned about myself, the world, my heritage, and to be proud of who I was. Would I have done anything differently? Of course, but it’s all part of my journey.

For starters, I wish I would have known that I wasn’t alone and that I’d make an incredible group of friends. A diverse group who didn’t care from where or from whom I came. They simply judged me based on my character and my actions. During my first years on campus, I wish I hadn’t been embarrassed to say I couldn’t go out to dinner because I didn’t have the money. I wish I could have had the confidence to know that I deserved to be at this elite institution like the rest of my classmates. I wish I had known that I wasn’t the only one who struggled with this “imposter syndrome”.

While I do wish I had this knowledge back then, I am proud of my experience. Whether it was luck, hard work, or a combination of both, I am proud that I was able to live within my means by budgetingand graduate with only $5,000 in student loans, a fraction of the national average, thanks to generous financial aid. I am proud that I graduated and did better academically than I could have ever imagined.

I’m proud that I was able to leverage my undergraduate degree to work on Wall Street followed by an incredible fashion start-up. I’m proud that I learned how to start investing the little money that I had while I was in college.

Going to Harvard for graduate school and getting my M.B.A. was the cherry on top. But my proudest college moment wasn’t graduating or getting my dream job. It was seeing my mom beaming with pride at my graduation – validation for the tremendous courage she had to raise three sons by herself as an immigrant. Yes, being a poor Latinx at an Ivy League university was isolating and may have felt embarrassing at times, but I now realize that I didn’t have anything to hide. With more confidence in myself and less fear about what others think, I’ll be able to make my dreams come true. And so will you.

What It Was Like To Be Poor In The Ivy League – The Finance Twins (5)

What It Was Like To Be Poor In The Ivy League – The Finance Twins (6)

Camilo Maldonado

Camilo is a personal finance expert and the Co-Founder and CEO of The Finance Twins. I was raised in poverty by a single mother and had to learn everything about personal finance on my own. I have been featured on Forbes, Business Insider, CNBC, and US News. Earlier in my career, I worked as an investment banking analyst on Wall Street at JPMorgan Chase & Co., and I have an M.B.A. from Harvard University and a B.S.E. in finance from the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania.

What It Was Like To Be Poor In The Ivy League – The Finance Twins (2024)

FAQs

What percentage of Ivy League students are poor? ›

Are low-income students admitted into Ivy Leagues? About 19% of Ivy League students receive federal Pell Grants, compared with 40% of college students nationwide, according to the report.

How do you get into the Ivy League if you are poor? ›

If your family meets the income requirements for need-based aid, you could attend a big-name or Ivy League school tuition-free, avoiding heavy student debt. Here are some of the Ivy League colleges that offer needs-based free college tuition packages for undergrads: Princeton University.

Is Ivy League for rich kids? ›

Children of the top one percent, earning more than $611,000 a year, are significantly overrepresented in the Ivy League — more likely to attend selective private colleges than students from any other income bracket with comparable SAT and ACT scores.

What are the struggles of low income college students? ›

Low income students struggle to have basic necessities like food and housing. Low income students find themselves skipping meals or reducing food intake altogether to save money. Some college kids rely on staying at school over breaks. It may be too expensive to go back home, or there may be no home to go back to.

Where do top 1% send kids to college? ›

Children from families with income in the top 1% are more likely to be admitted to Ivy League and other elite colleges, including Stanford, according to a new study. That's true even when controlling for standardized test scores.

Where do the top 1% go to college? ›

At 38 colleges in America, including five in the Ivy League – Dartmouth, Princeton, Yale, Penn and Brown – more students came from the top 1 percent of the income scale than from the entire bottom 60 percent.

Can I go to Harvard if I'm poor? ›

A lack of financial resources or need for financial aid are not impediments to your admission. Our aid is entirely need-based, and eligibility is determined in the same manner for all admitted students regardless of nationality or citizenship.

What is the lowest GPA for Ivy? ›

None of the Ivy League schools have a minimum GPA requirement for applications, which means anyone can apply with any GPA. For Ivy League schools, however, a competitive GPA and application are best. Admission rates at Ivy League schools may be low, but it's possible with a well-rounded application.

Which Ivy League is free? ›

Ivy League schools such as Princeton University, Harvard University and Yale University take things one step further by offering a completely free college education for students from families that make less than $100,000.

Who is the youngest kid to get into Harvard? ›

Harvard University and college life (1909–1914)

Although the university had previously refused to let his father enroll him at age 9 because he was still a child, in 1909, at age 11, Sidis set a record by becoming the youngest person to enroll at Harvard University.

How do billionaire kids get into the Ivy League? ›

What advantages do you think children of wealthy families have towards being admitted into the elite colleges/universities? The biggest factor is that the parents got wealthy for a reason. In nearly all cases this is because the parents went to good universities, studied hard, and chose a marketable major.

How many billionaires go to Harvard? ›

1. Harvard University. The University produced 29 billionaires till 2021, of these 17 amassed their fortunes in the finance and investment industry.

Why do poor students struggle? ›

Students living in poverty often have fewer resources at home to complete homework, study, or engage in activities that helps equip them for success during the school day.

Do college students struggle financially? ›

Colleges and universities have found that about one-third of those who start a four-year degree never finish. And according to a LendEDU survey, about half of these students drop out due to financial issues.

Is it hard for poor people to go to college? ›

Students from Low-Income Households Less Likely to Attend Selective Schools – More than two-thirds of students whose families are in the lowest quintile of income attend two-year institutions or less. Just four percent of such students attend highly competitive four-year institutions.

What percent of Ivy League students are rich? ›

Sure, lots of them - on average, about 17–20% of Ivy League students come from top 1% families. But the highest percentages of Top-1% students are found at some non-ivy schools.

What percent of Harvard is low income? ›

55% of our undergraduates receive need-based Harvard scholarships. Families with incomes below $85,000 (up from $75,000 starting in the 23-24 school year) are not expected to contribute to the cost of their child's education. Roughly 24% of Harvard families have total incomes less than $85,000.

How many poor students go to Harvard? ›

The median income of a Harvard University student's household is $168,800. The median family income of a student from Harvard is $168,800, and 67% come from the top 20 percent. About 1.8% of students at Harvard came from a poor family but became a rich adult.

What percentage of Harvard students are rich? ›

Overall, 67% of Harvard's undergraduate population comes from "the top [20%] of the income distribution. Just 4.5 percent, meanwhile, come from the bottom 20 percent."

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