My parents are paying for my undergrad (and as a result I'm going to private school, which they're okay with), but I assure you if I'm going to be in debt after grad school at a certain place, assuming I get a graduate degree, I'm not going to go there. If that means I go to the University of Toronto, great. I don't know what's so difficult about that for most kids. If I weren't getting what essentially equals a free ride to school, I would have already signed to go to school at Indiana by now, or maybe I'd be going to a Canadian public, which is crazy cheap compared to our schools.
There is a girl in my school whose grandparents were some of the richest people in Indiana way back when. They had their own business empire and had more money than they knew what to do with. Her parents are equally rich, partially from inheritance from the aforementioned, but partially because they sold their own business for a pretty hefty sum (over seven digits, but I don't know exactly how much). Now their only daughter is going to a private school in Seattle to get a degree in some abstract form of photography, and the school costs $50,000 a year, not including housing, books, food, etc., which surely adds up to $60,000+ a year. I doubt she's ever going to have anything close to that, and she could go to IU for $16,000 a year in-state, probably getting all of that paid for in scholarships with how (school-)smart she is, and get her photography degree without taking away what her family has worked for since the post-WWII era at no real gain.
This, of course, is the anomaly, because she has a crazy rich family whose name is on tons of buildings around the city, including the hospital I was born in. There are other kids whose parents can in no way afford for them to go to these places, so they assume they can take it upon themselves to pay a good portion of that $60,000 tuition, when in fact they're going to be in debt up to their necks for thirty years, and there's certainly no potential partner-for-life that's going to want any part in assisting with that debt, if you know what I'm getting at.
That said, there's two sides to this. I intend to study philosophy, which can very easily be a worthless degree since it doesn't have a direct lead-in to a career, but combining with a graduate degree in something like communications or education can lead to anything from law to journalism to education, all of which I am interested in, and there are so many 5-year undergrad/graduate options nowadays that it's actually a time-smart move if you can afford it, which, fortunately for me, my family can.