The global chain of coffee shops said its full- and part-time US-based employees will be eligible for aid to complete a bachelor's degree with Arizona State University (ASU), one of the country's most active in providing on-line college degrees.
Nearly 70 per cent of Starbucks US employees are college students or young people who want to go to college.
It said that nearly half of Americans who begin college these days will not finish, largely because of high costs and difficulties in juggling jobs with the rest of their lives.
The cost of higher education is a red-hot topic today in America.
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Universities have become so expensive -- tens of thousands of dollars per year is a common figure even at non-elite schools -- that students take out loans to get degrees and are saddled with huge debts they carry with them for years.
And economists warn these debts hinder the economy by preventing these young people from doing economy-stimulating things like starting families and buying big-ticket items like houses and cars.
First and second year students will receive a partial scholarship and need-based financial aid toward "the foundational work of completing their degree. Partners will have no commitment to remain at Starbucks past graduation," the company added.