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Wikipedia

Student loans in the United States

In the United States, student loans are a form of financial aid intended to help students access higher education. In 2018, 70 percent of higher education graduates had used loans to cover some or all of their expenses.[1] With notable exceptions, student loans must be repaid, in contrast to other forms of financial aid such as scholarships, which are not repaid, and grants, which rarely have to be repaid. Student loans may be discharged through bankruptcy, but this is difficult.[2] Research shows that access to student loans increases credit-constrained students' degree completion, later-life earnings, and student loan repayment while having no impact on overall debt.[3]

Debt in the United States

Student loan debt has proliferated since 2006, totaling $1.73 trillion by July 2021. In 2019, students who borrowed to complete a bachelor's degree had about $30,000 of debt upon graduation.[4]: 1 [5] Almost half of all loans are for graduate school, typically in much higher amounts.[4]: 1 [5] Loan amounts vary widely based on race, social class, age, institution type, and degree sought. As of 2017, student debt constituted the largest non-mortgage liability for US households.[6] Research indicates that increasing borrowing limits drives tuition increases.[7]

Student loan defaults are disproportionately common in the for-profit college sector.[8] Around 2010, about 10 percent of college students attended for-profit colleges, but almost 40 percent of all defaults on federal student loans were to for-profit attendees.[9] The schools whose students have the highest amount of debt are University of Phoenix, Walden University, Nova Southeastern University, Capella University, and Strayer University.[10] Except for Nova Southeastern, they are all for-profit. In 2018, the National Center for Education Statistics reported that the 12-year student loan default rate for for-profit colleges was 52 percent.[11]

The default rate for borrowers who do not complete their degree is three times the rate for those who did.[4]: 1 A Brookings Institution study from 2023 revealed that when the government pauses repayment on student loans, it most often "...benefit[s] affluent borrowers the most..." primarily due to affluent borrowers holding the largest student debt balances.[12][13]

History edit

Federal student loans were first offered in 1958 under the National Defense Education Act (NDEA).[14] They were available only to select categories of students, such as those studying engineering, science, or education. The program was established in response to the Soviet Union's launch of the Sputnik satellite.[15] It addressed the widespread perception that the United States had fallen behind in science and technology. Student loans became more broadly available in the 1960s under the Higher Education Act of 1965, with the goal of encouraging greater social mobility and equal opportunity.[16][17]

In 1967, the publicly owned Bank of North Dakota made the first federally-insured student loan.[18][19]

The US first major government loan program was the Student Loan Marketing Association (Sallie Mae), formed in 1973.[20][clarification needed]

Before 2010, federal loans included:

  • loans originated and funded directly by the Department of Education (DOE)
  • government guaranteed loans originated and funded by private investors.

Direct-to-consumer private loans were the fastest-growing segment of education finance. The "percentage of undergraduates obtaining private loans from 2003–04 to 2007–08 rose from 5 percent to 14 percent" and was under legislative scrutiny due to the lack of school certification.[21][22]

2010s edit

The rules for disability discharge underwent major changes as a result of the Higher Education Opportunity Act of 2008. The regulations took effect July 1, 2010.[23] In June 2010, the amount of student loan debt held by Americans exceeded the amount of credit card debt held by Americans.[24] At that time, student loan debt totalled at least $830 billion, of which approximately 80% was federal and 20% was private. By the fourth quarter of 2015, total outstanding student loans owned and securitized had surpassed $1.3 trillion.[25]

Guaranteed loans were eliminated in 2010 through the Student Aid and Fiscal Responsibility Act and replaced with direct loans. The Obama administration claimed that guaranteed loans benefited private companies at taxpayer expense but did not reduce student costs.[16][17]

The Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act of 2010 (HCERA) ended private-sector lending under the Federal Family Education Loan Program (FFELP) starting July 1, 2010; all subsidized and unsubsidized Stafford loans, PLUS loans, and Consolidation loans are under the Federal Direct Loan Program.[22]

As of July 1, 2013, borrowers determined to be disabled by the Social Security Administration would be accepted for loan discharge if the SSA placed the individual on a five- to seven-year review cycle.[26] As of January 1, 2018, the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 established that debt discharged due to the death or disability of the borrower was no longer treated as taxable income.[27] (This provision is scheduled to sunset on December 31, 2025.)[28]

In an effort to improve the student loan market, LendKey, SoFi (Social Finance, Inc.) and CommonBond began offering student loans and refinancing at lower rates than traditional lenders, using an alumni-funded model.[29][30] According to a 2016 analysis by online student loan marketplace Credible, about 8 million borrowers could qualify for refinancing.[31]

The Federal Reserve Bank of New York's February 2017 Quarterly Report on Household Debt and Credit reported 11.2% of aggregate student loan debt was 90 or more days delinquent.[32]

On July 25, 2018, Education Secretary Betsy DeVos issued an order declaring that the Borrower Defense Program (enacted in November 2016),[33] would be replaced with a stricter repayment policy, effective July 1, 2019.[34] When a school closes for fraud before conferring degrees, students would have to prove that they were financially harmed.[35] As of 2018, 10% of borrowers were in default after three years and 16 percent after five years.[8]

In 2019, President Donald Trump ordered loan forgiveness for permanently disabled veterans, saving 25,000 veterans an average of $30,000 each.[36] The same year, Theresa Sweet and other student loan debtors filed a claim against the US Department of Education, arguing that they had been defrauded by their colleges. The debtors filed under a rule known as Borrower Defense to Repayment.[37]

2020s edit

Starting in March 2020, federal student loan borrowers received temporary relief from student loan payments during the COVID-19 pandemic.[38] This relief was subsequently extended multiple times, and is set to expire at the end of June 2023.[39] According to repayment data released by the Education Department, in December 2021, just 1.2 percent of borrowers were continuing to pay down their loans during the over two years of optional deferment.[40]

In 2021, student loan servicers began dropping out of the federal student loan business, including FedLoan Servicing on July 8, Granite State Management and Resources on July 20, and Navient on September 28.[41] According to Sallie Mae, as of 2021, 1 in 8 families lenders are using private student loans when federal financing doesn't cover all college costs.[42]

In July 2021, the U.S. Second Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that private student loans are dischargeable in bankruptcy,[43] following two other cases.[44]

In August 2021, the Biden administration announced it would use executive action to cancel $5.8 billion in student loans held by 323,000 people who are permanently disabled.[45]

In November 2022, federal judge William Alsup ruled for immediate relief for about 200,000 student debtors and in April 2023 US Supreme Justice Elena Kagan declined to grant emergency relief to three for-profit colleges.[46]

In the 30 years from 1991–1992 to 2021–2022, private college tuitions (adjusted for inflation) doubled, while public school tuitions increased by 2.5 times.[47] In 1991–1992, state and local governments covered about three-quarters of the cost of public college, with tuition paying for the remaining quarter, but by 2021–2022, significant funding cuts to higher education resulted in governments only covering about half the current costs.[47] In addition, since federal student loans do not limit the amount a lender can borrow, this has allowed public as well as private colleges to increase their tuitions.[47]

In February 2023, the U.S. Supreme Court heard oral arguments in Biden v. Nebraska concerning President Biden's order to cancel student loan debt for an estimated 40 million debtors.[48][49] In June 2023, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in favor of Nebraska to block Biden's plan to forgive federal student loans.[50]

Overview edit

 
Student loan debt rose from $480.1 billion (3.5% GDP) in Q1 2006 to $1,683 billion (7.8% GDP) in Q1 2020.

Student loans play a significant role in U.S. higher education.[51] Nearly 20 million Americans attend college each year, of whom close to 12 million – or 60% – borrow annually to help cover costs.[52] As of 2021, approximately 45 million Americans held student debt, with an average balance of approximately $30,000.[53]

In Europe, higher education receives more government funding, making student loans less common.[54] In parts of Asia and Latin America government funding for post-secondary education is lower – usually limited to flagship universities, like UNAM in Mexico – and government programs under which students can borrow money are uncommon.[54]

In the United States, college is funded by government grants, scholarships, loans. The primary grant program is Pell grants.[54][16]

Student loans come in several varieties, but are basically either federal loans[55] or private student loans. Federal loans are either subsidized (the government pays the interest) and unsubsidized. Federal student loans are subsidized for undergraduates only. Subsidized loans generally defer payments and interest until some period (usually six months) after the student has left school.[56] Some states have their own loan programs, as do some colleges.[57] In almost all cases, these student loans have better conditions than private loans.[58]

Student loans may be used for college-related expenses, including tuition, room and board, books, computers, and transportation.

Demographics edit

Approximately 30% of all college students do not borrow.[1] In 2019, the average undergraduate who had taken on debt had a loan balance of about $30,000 upon graduation. Almost half of the student loans are for graduate education, and those loan amounts are typically much higher.[4]: 1 [5]

Social class edit

According to the Saint Louis Federal Reserve Bank, "existing racial wealth disparities and soaring higher education costs may replicate racial wealth disparities across generations by driving racial disparities in student loan debt load and repayment."[59]

Low-income students often prefer grants and scholarships over loans because of their difficulty repaying them. In 2004, 88.5% of Pell Grant recipients who had bachelor's degrees graduated with student loan debt. After college, students struggle to break into a higher income bracket because of the loans they owe. Though, it's been shown that when it comes to student loan forgiveness and advocacy around this issue, lower-socioeconomic groups are the ones most motivated to contact their legislators about student loans. In 1995, 64 percent of students whose family incomes falling below $35,000 were contacting their legislators concerning student loans.[60]

Race and gender edit

According to the New York Times, "recent black graduates of four-year colleges owe, on average, $7,400 more than their white peers. Four years after graduation, they still owe an average of $53,000, almost twice as much as whites."[61]

According to an analysis by Demos, 12 years after entering college:

  • White men paid off 44 percent of their student-loan balance
  • White women paid off 28 percent
  • Black men saw their balances grow 11 percent
  • Black women saw their loan balances grow 13 percent[62]

Age edit

According to a CNBC analysis, the highest student debt balances are carried by adults aged 25–49, with the lowest debt loads held by those aged 62 and older.[63]

As of 2021, approximately 7.8 million Americans from 18 to 25 carry student loan debt, with an average balance of almost $15,000.[64] For adults between the ages of 35 and 49, the average individual balance owed exceeded $42,000. The average debt for adults between 50 and 61 is slightly lower. These balances include loans for their education and their children.[65]

Federal loans edit

Loans to students edit

Stafford and Perkins loans were federal loans made to students.[66] These loans did not consider credit history (most students have no credit history); approval was automatic if the student met program requirements. Nearly all students are eligible to receive federal loans.

Payment and discharge edit

The student makes no payments while enrolled at least half-time. If a student drops below half time or graduates, a six-month deferment begins. If the student returns to least half-time status, the loans are again deferred, but a second episode no longer qualifies and repayment must begin. All Perkins loans and some undergraduate Stafford loans are subsidized. Loan amounts are limited.

Many deferment and forbearance options are offered in the Federal Direct Student Loan program.[67]

Disabled borrowers have the possibility of discharge.[68][69] Other discharge provisions are available for teachers in specific critical subjects or in a school that has more than 30% of its students on reduced-price lunch. They qualify for discharge of Stafford, Perkins, and Federal Family Education Loan Program loans up to $77,500.[70]

Any person employed full-time by a 501(c)(3) non-profit group, or another qualifying public service organization, or serving in a full-time AmeriCorps or Peace Corps position,[71] qualifies for discharge after 120 qualifying payments.[72][73] However, loan discharge is considered taxable income.[74] Loans discharged that were not the result of long-term public service employment constitute taxable income.

Student loan borrowers may have their existing federal student loan debt removed if they can prove that their school misled them. The program is called Borrower Defense to Repayment or Borrower Defense.[75]

Subsidies are conditional depending on financial need. Pricing and loan limits are determined by Congress. Undergraduates typically receive lower interest rates, while graduate students typically can borrow more. Disregarding risk has been criticized as contributing to inefficiency.[16] Financial needs may vary from school to school. The government covers interest charges while the student is in college. For example, those who borrow $10,000 during college owe $10,000 upon graduation.[citation needed]

Terms edit

Loans are guaranteed by DOE, either directly or through guarantee agencies[clarification needed].

The dependent undergraduate limits are $5,500 per year for freshman undergraduates, $6,500 for sophomore undergraduates, and $7,500 per year for junior and senior undergraduates, as well as students enrolled in teacher certification or coursework preparatory for graduate programs.[76]

For independent undergraduates, the limits are $9,500 per year for freshmen, $10,500 for sophomores, and $12,500 per year for juniors and seniors, as well as students enrolled in teacher certification or preparatory coursework for graduate programs.

Unsubsidized loans are also guaranteed, but interest accrues during study.[77] Nearly all students are eligible for these loans regardless of financial need.[78] Those who borrow $10,000 during college owe $10,000 plus interest upon graduation. Accrued interest is added to the loan amount, and the borrower makes payments on the total. Students can make payments while studying.

Graduate students have higher limits: $8,500 for subsidized Stafford and $12,500 (varying by course of study) for unsubsidized Stafford. For graduate students, the Perkins limit is $6,000 per year.

Stafford loan aggregate limits edit

Stafford borrowers cannot exceed aggregate limits for subsidized and unsubsidized loans. For dependent undergraduates, the aggregate limit is $57,500, while subsidized loans are limited to $23,000.[79] Students who reach the maximum in subsidized loans may (based on grade level—undergraduate, graduate/professional, etc.) add a loan of less than or equal to the amount they would have been eligible for in subsidized loans. Once aggregate limits are met, the student is ineligible for additional Stafford loans until they pay back a portion of the borrowed funds. A student who has paid back some of these amounts regains eligibility up to the aggregate limits as before. Graduate students have a lifetime aggregate loan limit of $138,500.

Debt statistics edit

  • Direct loans ($1.15 trillion, 34.2 million borrowers)
  • FFEL loans ($281.8 billion, 13.5 million borrowers). The program ended in 2010.
  • Perkins loans ($7.1 billion, 2.3 million borrowers). The program ended in 2018.
  • Total ($1.4392 trillion, 42.9 million borrowers)

Loans to parents edit

PLUS loans are federal education loans made to parents.[80] These have much higher loan limits, usually enough to cover costs that exceed student financial aid. Payments start immediately after education ends, although prepayment is allowed. Credit history is considered; thus, approval is not automatic.

Interest accrues during the time the student is in school. PLUS interest rates as of 2017 were 7%.[81]

The parents are personally responsible for repayment. The parents sign the master promissory note and are accountable. Parents are advised to consider their monthly payments. Loan documents reflect the repayment schedule for a single year. Since most students borrow again each year, the ultimate payments are much higher. PLUS loans consider credit history, making it more difficult for low-income parents to qualify.

Graduate students are eligible to receive PLUS loans in their own names. Graduate PLUS loans have the same interest rates and terms as those to parents.

Federal Direct Student Loans, also known as Direct Loans or FDLP loans, originate with the United States Treasury. FDLP loans are distributed by the DOE, then to the college or university and then to the student.[82]

Debt levels edit

 
Distribution of student loan debt in the U.S.

Loan limits are below the cost of most four-year private institutions and most public universities. Students add private student loans to make up the difference.[17]

The maximum amount that any student can borrow is adjusted as federal policies change.

Defaults edit

Out of 100 students who ever attended a for-profit institution, 23 defaulted in the 1996 cohort compared to 43 in the 2004 cohort (compared to an increase from 8 to 11 among borrowers who never attended a for-profit).[83]

As of 2018 black BA graduates defaulted at five times the rate of white BA graduates (21 versus 4 percent), and were more likely to default than white dropouts.[83]

Private loans edit

Private loans are offered by banks or finance companies. They are not guaranteed by a government agency. Private loans cost more, offer less favorable terms, and are generally used only when students have exhausted the federal borrowing limit. They are not eligible for Income-Based Repayment plans, and frequently have less flexible payment terms, higher fees, and more penalties, than federal student loans.[16][17][84] Private loans may be difficult to discharge through bankruptcy.[85]

Private loans are made to students or parents. They have higher limits and no payments until after education, although interest starts to accrue immediately and the deferred interest is added to the principal. Interest rates are higher on federal loans, which are set by the United States Congress.[86]

The advantage of private student loans is that they do not include loan or total debt limits. They typically offer a no-payment grace period of six months (occasionally 12 months).

Most experts recommend private loans only as a last resort, because of the less favorable terms.[87][88]

Loan servicers edit

The U.S. Department of Education contracts with companies to manage, or service, the loans it owns. These companies are the primary point of contact for borrowers after they graduate and enter repayment.

A student loan servicer is a company which facilitates different aspects of a loan. The servicing group will typically be responsible for maintaining records on a particular loan, handling loan distribution, and providing requested information to the loan recipient.[89] US student loan servicers include Navient, FedLoan Servicing (PHEAA), MOHELA, HESC/EdFinancial, Granite State - GSMR, OSLA Servicing, and Debt Management and Collections System.[90]

In recent years, some student loan servicers have gone under legal scrutiny for alleged wrongdoing. Navient, formerly Sallie Mae, was charged with multiple class action lawsuits for their loan servicing methods. Navient was also sued by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) for improper handling of borrower relations. FedLoan has also received public pressure for possible mistreatment of loan recipients.[91]

As of July 2023, the four companies which service the majority of student loans are Aidvantage, EdFinancial Services, MOHELA (Higher Education Loan Authority of the State of Missouri) and Nelnet.[92] ECSI (Educational Computer Systems, Inc.) is the exclusive servicer for the remaining Perkins Loans. Borrowers who have defaulted on loans are assigned to the Department of Education’s Default Resolution Group for servicing.

Student loan asset-backed securities (SLABS) edit

FFELP and private loans are bundled, securitized, rated, then sold to institutional investors as student loan asset-backed securities (SLABS). Navient and Nelnet are two major private lenders.[93] Wells Fargo Bank, JP MorganChase, Goldman Sachs and other large banks package and sell SLABS in bundles. Moody's, Fitch Ratings, and Standard and Poor's rate SLAB quality.[94]

The Asset-Backed Security (ABS) industry received financial relief in 2008 and in 2020 through the Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility (TALF) program, which was created to preserve the flow of credit to consumers and businesses, including student loans.[95] In 2020, critics argued that the SLAB market was poorly regulated and could be headed toward a significant downturn, despite perceptions that it was low risk.[96]

Repayment and default edit

Metrics edit

The industry metrics are repayment rate[97] and default rate, such as the one-, three-,[98] five-,[8] and seven-year default rates.[99] DOE's College Scorecard includes the following repayment statuses:

  • Making Progress
  • Forbearance
  • Deferment
  • Not Making Progress[clarification needed]
  • Delinquent
  • Defaulted
  • Paid In Full
  • Discharged

Repayment rate edit

The three-year repayment rate for each school that receives Title IV funding is available at DOE's College Scorecard.[99] This number may be a poor indicator of the overall default rate: some schools place loans into forbearance, deferring loans beyond the three-year window to present a low default rate.[100][101]

Default rate edit

The default rate for borrowers who did not complete their degree is three times as high as the rate for those who did.[4]: 1

Standard repayment edit

Federal loans are initially designated as standard repayment.[102] Standard repayment borrowers have 10 years to repay. The loan servicer calculates the monthly payment amount that will pay off the original loan amount plus all accrued interest after 120 equal payments.

Payments cover interest and part of the principal. Some loan terms may be shorter than 10 years. The minimum monthly payment varies in amount, but is usually within the range of $50-100.

Income-related repayment edit

Income-based repayment edit

Income-based repayment options in the United States consist four plans:

Four IDRs are available:

  • Income-Based Repayment (IBR)
  • Pay As You Earn (PAYE)
  • Saving on a Valuable Education (SAVE), which replaced Revised Pay As You Earn (REPAYE) in 2023
  • Income-Contingent Repayment (ICR)

These plans limit monthly payments to a percentage of discretionary income and forgive unpaid balances after a certain number of years.[103]

Income share agreements edit

An income share agreement is an alternative to a traditional loan. The borrower agrees to pay a percentage of their salary to the educational institution after graduation.[104] Purdue University offers income share agreements.[105]

Defenses to repayment edit

Under some circumstances, debt can be cancelled. For example, students who attended a school when it closed or the student was enrolled based on false claims may be able to escape repayment.[106]

Leaving the country to evade repayment edit

Debt evasion is the intentional act of trying to avoid attempts by creditors to collect a debt. News accounts report that some individuals are departing the US to escape their debt. Emigration does not discharge the loan or stop interest and penalties from accruing.[107]

International addresses make it more difficult to find people, and collection companies would usually need to hire an international counsel or a third party collector to recoup the debt, cutting into their profits and reducing their incentive to go after a debtor. 'It increases our expenses to go overseas,' says Justin Berg of American Profit Recovery, a debt collection agency in Massachusetts. 'Our revenues are cut by more than half,' he says."

Nations may enter into agreements with the US to facilitate the collection of student loans.[108]

After default, co-signers remain liable for repayment.[109][110]

Bankruptcy edit

Federal loans and some private loans can be discharged in bankruptcy by demonstrating that the loan does not meet the requirements of section 523(a)(8)[111] of the bankruptcy code or by showing that repayment of the loan would constitute "undue hardship". While credit card debt often can be discharged through bankruptcy proceedings,[112][113] this option is not generally available for federally subsidize or insured student loans.[114][115] Unless the loan can be proven not to be an educational benefit,[116] those seeking to discharge their debt must initiate an adversary proceeding, a separate lawsuit within the bankruptcy case where they illustrate the required hardship.[117] Many borrowers cannot afford the costs to retain an attorney or litigation costs associated with an adversary proceeding, such as a bankruptcy case. The undue hardship standard varies from jurisdiction to jurisdiction, but is generally difficult to meet. In most circuit courts discharge depends on meeting the three prongs in the Brunner test:[118]

As noted by the district court, there is very little appellate authority on the definition of "undue hardship" in the context of 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(8)(B). Based on legislative history and the decisions of other district and bankruptcy courts, the district court adopted a standard for "undue hardship" requiring a three-part showing: (1) that the debtor cannot maintain, based on current income and expenses, a "minimal" standard of living for herself and her dependents if forced to repay the loans; (2) that additional circumstances exist indicating that this state of affairs is likely to persist for a significant portion of the repayment period of the student loans; and (3) that the debtor has made good faith efforts to repay the loans. For the reasons set forth in the district court's order, we adopt this analysis. The first part of this test has been applied frequently as the minimum necessary to establish "undue hardship." See, e.g., Bryant v. Pennsylvania Higher Educ. Assistance Agency (In re Bryant), 72 B.R. 913, 915 (Bankr.E.D.Pa.1987); North Dakota State Bd. of Higher Educ. v. Frech (In re Frech), 62 B.R. 235 (Bankr.D.Minn.1986); Marion v. Pennsylvania Higher Educ. Assistance Agency (In re Marion), 61 B.R. 815 (Bankr.W.D.Pa.1986). Requiring such a showing comports with common sense as well.[119]

Federal student loans may be eligible for administrative discharge. Those provisions do not apply to private loans, although private loans may be subject to discharge in bankruptcy.[85] One study found that a quarter million student debtors file for bankruptcy each year. Approximately 450 attempted to seek a discharge in 2017 by arguing that their loan was not an "educational benefit" as defined by section 523(a)(8), or they successfully argued for "undue hardship". Of the completed cases, more than 60% were able to discharge their debts or achieve a settlement.[120] The study concluded that the data showed:[121]

Creditors are settling unfavorable cases to avoid adverse precedent and litigating good cases to cultivate favorable precedent. Ultimately, this litigation strategy has distorted the law and cultivated the myth of nondischargeability.

The study found that debtors who obtain favorable outcomes do not possess unique characteristics differentiating them from those who do not seek discharge and estimates that 64,000 individuals who filed for bankruptcy in 2019 would have met the hardship standard. It concluded about half of all bankrupt debtors could obtain relief, except that they had become convinced that loans were not dischargeable.[121]

For disabled debtors the standard is whether "substantial gainful activity" (SGA) is still possible Borrowers determined to be disabled by the Social Security Administration, are eligible if the SSA placed the individual on a five- to seven-year review cycle.[26] Debt discharged due to death or total permanent disability is nontaxable.[27]

In three circuit court jurisdictions private student loans are dischargeable in bankruptcy.[43][44]

Criticisms edit

School effects edit

Some critics of financial aid in general claim that it allows schools to raise their fees, to accept unprepared students, and to produce too many graduates in some fields of study.[122]

In 1987, then-Secretary of Education William Bennett argued that “... increases in financial aid in recent years have enabled colleges and universities blithely to raise tuition, confident that Federal loan subsidies would help cushion the increase.”[123] This statement came to be known as the “Bennett Hypothesis”.

In July 2015, a Federal Reserve Bank of New York Staff Report concluded that institutions more exposed to increases in student loan program maximums tended to respond with disproportionate tuition increases. Pell Grant, subsidized, and unsubsidized loans led to increases of about 40, 60, and 15 cents on the dollar, respectively. In the 20 years between 1987 and 2007, tuition costs rose 326%.[124] Public universities increased their fees by 27% over the five years ending in 2012, or 20% adjusted for inflation. Public university students paid an average of almost $8,400 annually for in-state tuition, while out-of-state students paid more than $19,000. For the two decades ending in 2013, college costs rose 1.6% more than inflation each year. By contrast, government funding per student fell 27% between 2007 and 2012.[125][126]

Many students cannot get loans or determine that the cost of going to school is not worth the debt, believing that they would still be unable to make enough income to pay it back.[127]

Some universities steered borrowers to preferred lenders that charged higher interest rates. Some of these lenders allegedly paid kick backs to university financial aid staff. After the behavior became public, many universities rebated fees to affected borrowers.[128][129]

Interest rates edit

The federal student loan program was criticized for not adjusting interest rates according to factors under students' control, such as the choice of academic major. Critics have contended that flat-rate pricing contributes to inefficiency and misallocation of resources in higher education and lower productivity in the labor market.[16] However, one study found that high debt and default levels do not burden society substantially.[130]

Bankruptcy edit

In 2009 student loans' non-dischargeability was claimed to provide a credit risk-free loan for the lender, averaging 7 percent a year.[131]

Long-term debt and default edit

About one-third of borrowers never pay off their loans. Those who default shift their burden to taxpayers.[122]

According to Harvard Business School researchers, "when student debt is erased, a huge burden is lifted and people take big steps to improve their lives: They seek higher-paying careers in new states, improve their education, get their other finances in order, and make more substantial contributions to the economy."[132]

A June 2023 report by the Jain Family Institute concluded that much of the outstanding 1.8 trillion in student loan debt will never be repaid, as more and more borrowers are unable to repay, and the cancelling of a large portion of outstanding student debt will be inevitable. The increased necessity of higher education to attain employment means more and more people are forced to take out loans. Stagnating wages, rising tuition, and the shrinking of government funding for higher education result in more and more borrowers being unable to repay and are forced to carry that debt burden well into the future, "impairing economic well-being for a widening and diversifying swath of the population, inhibiting savings, increasing precarity, and draining the very incomes the student debt was supposed to increase." The report says that, unless something changes, future generations will suffer the same consequences of student loan debt as millennials have, including "delayed marriages, reduced childbearing, less entrepreneurship, and decreased retirement security, among others."[133][134]

Sallie Mae and Nelnet edit

Sallie Mae and Nelnet are the largest lenders and are frequently defendants in lawsuits. The False Claims Suit was filed on behalf of the federal government by former DOE researcher Dr. Jon Oberg against Sallie Mae, Nelnet, and other lenders. Oberg argued that the lenders overcharged the United States Government and defrauded taxpayers of over $22 million. In August 2010, Nelnet settled and paid $55 million.[135] Ultimately seven lenders returned taxpayer funds as a result of his lawsuits.[136]

School quality edit

In April 2019, Brookings Institution fellow Adam Looney, a long-time analyst of student loans, claimed that:

"It is an outrage that the federal government offers loans to students at low-quality institutions even when we know those schools don’t boost their earnings and that those borrowers won’t be able to repay their loans. It is an outrage that we make parent PLUS loans to the poorest families when we know they almost surely will default and have their wages and social security benefits garnished and their tax refunds confiscated, as $2.8 billion was in 2017. It is an outrage that we saddled several million students with loans to enroll in untested online programs that seem to have offered no labor market value. It is an outrage that our lending programs encourage schools like USC to charge $107,484 (and students to blithely enroll) for a master’s degree in social work (220 percent more than the equivalent course at UCLA) in a field where the median wage is $47,980. It’s no wonder many borrowers feel their student loans led to economic catastrophe."[137]

Potential consequences of student loan debt edit

While college grads earn about 70% more than people with only a high school degree,[138] student loan debt has been associated with several social, economic, and psychological consequences, including:

  • having to choose less satisfying work that pays more
  • lower credit ratings from missed payments that may disqualify borrowers from work opportunities given poor payment history
  • reduced wealth accumulation
  • reduced housing access
  • delayed marriage
  • delayed childbirth
  • decreased retirement security[139]
  • increased anxiety[138][140][141][142][143][144]

Reform proposals edit

Organizations that advocate for student loan reform include the Debt Collective and Student Loan Justice.[145][146][147]

Some pundits proposed that colleges share liability on defaulted student loans.[148][149][150]

Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) and Rep. Pramila Jayapal (D-Wash.) introduced legislation in 2017 to "make public colleges and universities tuition-free for working families and to significantly reduce student debt." The policy would eliminate undergraduate tuition and fees at public colleges and universities, lower interest rates, and allow those with existing debt to refinance.[151][152] Sanders offered a new proposal in 2019 that would cancel $1.6 trillion of student loan, undergraduate and graduate debt for around 45 million Americans.[153]

Senator Brian Schatz (D-Hawaii) reintroduced the Debt Free College Act in 2019.[154][155]

In 2020, a majority of economists surveyed by the Initiative on Global Markets felt that forgiving all student loans would be more beneficial to higher income earners than lower income earners.[156]

During the 2020 presidential election, then-candidate Joe Biden said he planned to allow $10,000 in debt forgiveness to all student debtors. On August 24, 2022, Biden announced that he would forgive an amount of $10,000 for an estimated 43 million borrowers, and an additional $10,000 for Pell Grant recipients, with this relief limited to singles earning under $125,000 and married couples earning under $250,000,[157] including refunding payments during the forbearance period by any borrower who requests it.[158] This would reduce debt for an estimated 43 million borrowers and eliminate student loan debt for an estimated 20 million.[159] The Congressional Budget Office estimated that it would cost the government about $400 billion.[160][161][162] The administration also proposed a new income-driven repayment plan.[163] The U.S. Supreme Court ruled June 30, 2023 in Biden v. Nebraska that Biden's plan required action by Congress and that the HEROES Act did not permit the administration to act on its own.[164]

Some borrowers still have loans issued under the Federal Family Education Loan Program which closed in 2010. The Biden forgiveness plan originally allowed these borrowers to receive forgiveness by consolidating into Direct Loans, but due to potential lawsuits stopped allowing this on September 29, 2022, potentially excluding 800,000 FFEL borrowers.[165][160]

In February 2024, the Biden administration announced it would cancel $1.2 billion of student debt. The debt cancellation applies only to those enrolled in the Saving on a Valuable Education (SAVE) repayment plan who have been making payments for at least 10 years and who originally borrowed $12,000 or less for school.[166] In April 2024, Biden announced plans to ease student loan debt, benefiting 23 million Americans. The plans included cancellation of up to $20,000 of accrued interest, regardless of income and automatic cancellation of debt for borrowers who were eligible for certain forgiveness programs, who had entered repayment decades ago, who had enrolled in low financial value programs, or who had been experiencing hardship.[167]

See also edit

References edit

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  162. ^ Turner, Cory; Carrillo, Sequoia (August 24, 2022). "Biden is canceling up to $10K in student loans, $20K for Pell Grant recipients". NPR. In a May analysis, the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget estimated a policy like the one Biden announced would cost at least $230 billion, and warned that even income limits "would do almost nothing to alleviate the central issues with the policy, namely that it is regressive, inflationary, expensive, and would likely do more to increase the cost of higher education going forward than to reduce it."
  163. ^ Liu, Jennifer (August 24, 2022). "Biden announces new plan to cut some student loan payments in half". CNBC. Retrieved August 28, 2022.
  164. ^ Hurley, Lawrence. "Supreme Court kills Biden student loan relief plan". NBC. Retrieved June 30, 2023.
  165. ^ "In a reversal, the Education Dept. is excluding many from student loan relief". NPR.org.
  166. ^ Chloe Kim (February 21, 2024). "Biden cancels $1.2bn in student loans for more than 150,000 people". BBC News. Retrieved February 21, 2024.
  167. ^ Holland, Steve; Kelly, Stephanie (April 8, 2024). "Biden plans to cancel student loan debt, 23 million Americans may be impacted". Retrieved April 9, 2024.

Further reading edit

External links edit

  • "College, Inc.", PBS FRONTLINE documentary, May 4, 2010
  • "Student Loan Debt Clock

student, loans, united, states, student, loans, regulatory, framework, national, defense, education, higher, education, 1965, heroes, dept, education, fafsa, cost, attendance, expected, family, contribution, distribution, channels, federal, direct, student, lo. Student loans in the U S Regulatory framework National Defense Education Act Higher Education Act of 1965 HEROES Act U S Dept of Education FAFSA Cost of attendance Expected Family Contribution Distribution channels Federal Direct Student Loan Program Federal Family Education Loan Program Loan products Perkins Stafford PLUS Consolidation Loans Private student loans In the United States student loans are a form of financial aid intended to help students access higher education In 2018 70 percent of higher education graduates had used loans to cover some or all of their expenses 1 With notable exceptions student loans must be repaid in contrast to other forms of financial aid such as scholarships which are not repaid and grants which rarely have to be repaid Student loans may be discharged through bankruptcy but this is difficult 2 Research shows that access to student loans increases credit constrained students degree completion later life earnings and student loan repayment while having no impact on overall debt 3 Debt in the United States Student loan debt has proliferated since 2006 totaling 1 73 trillion by July 2021 In 2019 students who borrowed to complete a bachelor s degree had about 30 000 of debt upon graduation 4 1 5 Almost half of all loans are for graduate school typically in much higher amounts 4 1 5 Loan amounts vary widely based on race social class age institution type and degree sought As of 2017 student debt constituted the largest non mortgage liability for US households 6 Research indicates that increasing borrowing limits drives tuition increases 7 Student loan defaults are disproportionately common in the for profit college sector 8 Around 2010 about 10 percent of college students attended for profit colleges but almost 40 percent of all defaults on federal student loans were to for profit attendees 9 The schools whose students have the highest amount of debt are University of Phoenix Walden University Nova Southeastern University Capella University and Strayer University 10 Except for Nova Southeastern they are all for profit In 2018 the National Center for Education Statistics reported that the 12 year student loan default rate for for profit colleges was 52 percent 11 The default rate for borrowers who do not complete their degree is three times the rate for those who did 4 1 A Brookings Institution study from 2023 revealed that when the government pauses repayment on student loans it most often benefit s affluent borrowers the most primarily due to affluent borrowers holding the largest student debt balances 12 13 Contents 1 History 1 1 2010s 1 2 2020s 2 Overview 3 Demographics 3 1 Social class 3 2 Race and gender 3 3 Age 4 Federal loans 4 1 Loans to students 4 1 1 Payment and discharge 4 1 2 Terms 4 1 3 Stafford loan aggregate limits 4 1 4 Debt statistics 4 2 Loans to parents 4 3 Debt levels 4 4 Defaults 5 Private loans 6 Loan servicers 7 Student loan asset backed securities SLABS 8 Repayment and default 8 1 Metrics 8 1 1 Repayment rate 8 1 2 Default rate 8 2 Standard repayment 8 3 Income related repayment 8 3 1 Income based repayment 8 3 2 Income share agreements 8 4 Defenses to repayment 8 5 Leaving the country to evade repayment 9 Bankruptcy 10 Criticisms 10 1 School effects 10 2 Interest rates 10 3 Bankruptcy 10 4 Long term debt and default 10 5 Sallie Mae and Nelnet 10 6 School quality 10 7 Potential consequences of student loan debt 11 Reform proposals 12 See also 13 References 14 Further reading 15 External linksHistory editFederal student loans were first offered in 1958 under the National Defense Education Act NDEA 14 They were available only to select categories of students such as those studying engineering science or education The program was established in response to the Soviet Union s launch of the Sputnik satellite 15 It addressed the widespread perception that the United States had fallen behind in science and technology Student loans became more broadly available in the 1960s under the Higher Education Act of 1965 with the goal of encouraging greater social mobility and equal opportunity 16 17 In 1967 the publicly owned Bank of North Dakota made the first federally insured student loan 18 19 The US first major government loan program was the Student Loan Marketing Association Sallie Mae formed in 1973 20 clarification needed Before 2010 federal loans included loans originated and funded directly by the Department of Education DOE government guaranteed loans originated and funded by private investors Direct to consumer private loans were the fastest growing segment of education finance The percentage of undergraduates obtaining private loans from 2003 04 to 2007 08 rose from 5 percent to 14 percent and was under legislative scrutiny due to the lack of school certification 21 22 2010s edit The rules for disability discharge underwent major changes as a result of the Higher Education Opportunity Act of 2008 The regulations took effect July 1 2010 23 In June 2010 the amount of student loan debt held by Americans exceeded the amount of credit card debt held by Americans 24 At that time student loan debt totalled at least 830 billion of which approximately 80 was federal and 20 was private By the fourth quarter of 2015 total outstanding student loans owned and securitized had surpassed 1 3 trillion 25 Guaranteed loans were eliminated in 2010 through the Student Aid and Fiscal Responsibility Act and replaced with direct loans The Obama administration claimed that guaranteed loans benefited private companies at taxpayer expense but did not reduce student costs 16 17 The Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act of 2010 HCERA ended private sector lending under the Federal Family Education Loan Program FFELP starting July 1 2010 all subsidized and unsubsidized Stafford loans PLUS loans and Consolidation loans are under the Federal Direct Loan Program 22 As of July 1 2013 borrowers determined to be disabled by the Social Security Administration would be accepted for loan discharge if the SSA placed the individual on a five to seven year review cycle 26 As of January 1 2018 the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 established that debt discharged due to the death or disability of the borrower was no longer treated as taxable income 27 This provision is scheduled to sunset on December 31 2025 28 In an effort to improve the student loan market LendKey SoFi Social Finance Inc and CommonBond began offering student loans and refinancing at lower rates than traditional lenders using an alumni funded model 29 30 According to a 2016 analysis by online student loan marketplace Credible about 8 million borrowers could qualify for refinancing 31 The Federal Reserve Bank of New York s February 2017 Quarterly Report on Household Debt and Credit reported 11 2 of aggregate student loan debt was 90 or more days delinquent 32 On July 25 2018 Education Secretary Betsy DeVos issued an order declaring that the Borrower Defense Program enacted in November 2016 33 would be replaced with a stricter repayment policy effective July 1 2019 34 When a school closes for fraud before conferring degrees students would have to prove that they were financially harmed 35 As of 2018 10 of borrowers were in default after three years and 16 percent after five years 8 In 2019 President Donald Trump ordered loan forgiveness for permanently disabled veterans saving 25 000 veterans an average of 30 000 each 36 The same year Theresa Sweet and other student loan debtors filed a claim against the US Department of Education arguing that they had been defrauded by their colleges The debtors filed under a rule known as Borrower Defense to Repayment 37 2020s edit Starting in March 2020 federal student loan borrowers received temporary relief from student loan payments during the COVID 19 pandemic 38 This relief was subsequently extended multiple times and is set to expire at the end of June 2023 39 According to repayment data released by the Education Department in December 2021 just 1 2 percent of borrowers were continuing to pay down their loans during the over two years of optional deferment 40 In 2021 student loan servicers began dropping out of the federal student loan business including FedLoan Servicing on July 8 Granite State Management and Resources on July 20 and Navient on September 28 41 According to Sallie Mae as of 2021 1 in 8 families lenders are using private student loans when federal financing doesn t cover all college costs 42 In July 2021 the U S Second Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that private student loans are dischargeable in bankruptcy 43 following two other cases 44 In August 2021 the Biden administration announced it would use executive action to cancel 5 8 billion in student loans held by 323 000 people who are permanently disabled 45 In November 2022 federal judge William Alsup ruled for immediate relief for about 200 000 student debtors and in April 2023 US Supreme Justice Elena Kagan declined to grant emergency relief to three for profit colleges 46 In the 30 years from 1991 1992 to 2021 2022 private college tuitions adjusted for inflation doubled while public school tuitions increased by 2 5 times 47 In 1991 1992 state and local governments covered about three quarters of the cost of public college with tuition paying for the remaining quarter but by 2021 2022 significant funding cuts to higher education resulted in governments only covering about half the current costs 47 In addition since federal student loans do not limit the amount a lender can borrow this has allowed public as well as private colleges to increase their tuitions 47 In February 2023 the U S Supreme Court heard oral arguments in Biden v Nebraska concerning President Biden s order to cancel student loan debt for an estimated 40 million debtors 48 49 In June 2023 the U S Supreme Court ruled in favor of Nebraska to block Biden s plan to forgive federal student loans 50 Overview edit nbsp Student loan debt rose from 480 1 billion 3 5 GDP in Q1 2006 to 1 683 billion 7 8 GDP in Q1 2020 Student loans play a significant role in U S higher education 51 Nearly 20 million Americans attend college each year of whom close to 12 million or 60 borrow annually to help cover costs 52 As of 2021 approximately 45 million Americans held student debt with an average balance of approximately 30 000 53 In Europe higher education receives more government funding making student loans less common 54 In parts of Asia and Latin America government funding for post secondary education is lower usually limited to flagship universities like UNAM in Mexico and government programs under which students can borrow money are uncommon 54 In the United States college is funded by government grants scholarships loans The primary grant program is Pell grants 54 16 Student loans come in several varieties but are basically either federal loans 55 or private student loans Federal loans are either subsidized the government pays the interest and unsubsidized Federal student loans are subsidized for undergraduates only Subsidized loans generally defer payments and interest until some period usually six months after the student has left school 56 Some states have their own loan programs as do some colleges 57 In almost all cases these student loans have better conditions than private loans 58 Student loans may be used for college related expenses including tuition room and board books computers and transportation Demographics editApproximately 30 of all college students do not borrow 1 In 2019 the average undergraduate who had taken on debt had a loan balance of about 30 000 upon graduation Almost half of the student loans are for graduate education and those loan amounts are typically much higher 4 1 5 Social class edit According to the Saint Louis Federal Reserve Bank existing racial wealth disparities and soaring higher education costs may replicate racial wealth disparities across generations by driving racial disparities in student loan debt load and repayment 59 Low income students often prefer grants and scholarships over loans because of their difficulty repaying them In 2004 88 5 of Pell Grant recipients who had bachelor s degrees graduated with student loan debt After college students struggle to break into a higher income bracket because of the loans they owe Though it s been shown that when it comes to student loan forgiveness and advocacy around this issue lower socioeconomic groups are the ones most motivated to contact their legislators about student loans In 1995 64 percent of students whose family incomes falling below 35 000 were contacting their legislators concerning student loans 60 Race and gender edit According to the New York Times recent black graduates of four year colleges owe on average 7 400 more than their white peers Four years after graduation they still owe an average of 53 000 almost twice as much as whites 61 According to an analysis by Demos 12 years after entering college White men paid off 44 percent of their student loan balance White women paid off 28 percent Black men saw their balances grow 11 percent Black women saw their loan balances grow 13 percent 62 Age edit According to a CNBC analysis the highest student debt balances are carried by adults aged 25 49 with the lowest debt loads held by those aged 62 and older 63 As of 2021 approximately 7 8 million Americans from 18 to 25 carry student loan debt with an average balance of almost 15 000 64 For adults between the ages of 35 and 49 the average individual balance owed exceeded 42 000 The average debt for adults between 50 and 61 is slightly lower These balances include loans for their education and their children 65 Federal loans editLoans to students edit See also Federal Perkins Loan Stafford loan Federal Direct Student Loan Program and Federal student loan consolidation Stafford and Perkins loans were federal loans made to students 66 These loans did not consider credit history most students have no credit history approval was automatic if the student met program requirements Nearly all students are eligible to receive federal loans Payment and discharge edit The student makes no payments while enrolled at least half time If a student drops below half time or graduates a six month deferment begins If the student returns to least half time status the loans are again deferred but a second episode no longer qualifies and repayment must begin All Perkins loans and some undergraduate Stafford loans are subsidized Loan amounts are limited Many deferment and forbearance options are offered in the Federal Direct Student Loan program 67 Disabled borrowers have the possibility of discharge 68 69 Other discharge provisions are available for teachers in specific critical subjects or in a school that has more than 30 of its students on reduced price lunch They qualify for discharge of Stafford Perkins and Federal Family Education Loan Program loans up to 77 500 70 Any person employed full time by a 501 c 3 non profit group or another qualifying public service organization or serving in a full time AmeriCorps or Peace Corps position 71 qualifies for discharge after 120 qualifying payments 72 73 However loan discharge is considered taxable income 74 Loans discharged that were not the result of long term public service employment constitute taxable income Student loan borrowers may have their existing federal student loan debt removed if they can prove that their school misled them The program is called Borrower Defense to Repayment or Borrower Defense 75 Subsidies are conditional depending on financial need Pricing and loan limits are determined by Congress Undergraduates typically receive lower interest rates while graduate students typically can borrow more Disregarding risk has been criticized as contributing to inefficiency 16 Financial needs may vary from school to school The government covers interest charges while the student is in college For example those who borrow 10 000 during college owe 10 000 upon graduation citation needed Terms edit Loans are guaranteed by DOE either directly or through guarantee agencies clarification needed The dependent undergraduate limits are 5 500 per year for freshman undergraduates 6 500 for sophomore undergraduates and 7 500 per year for junior and senior undergraduates as well as students enrolled in teacher certification or coursework preparatory for graduate programs 76 For independent undergraduates the limits are 9 500 per year for freshmen 10 500 for sophomores and 12 500 per year for juniors and seniors as well as students enrolled in teacher certification or preparatory coursework for graduate programs Unsubsidized loans are also guaranteed but interest accrues during study 77 Nearly all students are eligible for these loans regardless of financial need 78 Those who borrow 10 000 during college owe 10 000 plus interest upon graduation Accrued interest is added to the loan amount and the borrower makes payments on the total Students can make payments while studying Graduate students have higher limits 8 500 for subsidized Stafford and 12 500 varying by course of study for unsubsidized Stafford For graduate students the Perkins limit is 6 000 per year Stafford loan aggregate limits edit Stafford borrowers cannot exceed aggregate limits for subsidized and unsubsidized loans For dependent undergraduates the aggregate limit is 57 500 while subsidized loans are limited to 23 000 79 Students who reach the maximum in subsidized loans may based on grade level undergraduate graduate professional etc add a loan of less than or equal to the amount they would have been eligible for in subsidized loans Once aggregate limits are met the student is ineligible for additional Stafford loans until they pay back a portion of the borrowed funds A student who has paid back some of these amounts regains eligibility up to the aggregate limits as before Graduate students have a lifetime aggregate loan limit of 138 500 Debt statistics edit Direct loans 1 15 trillion 34 2 million borrowers FFEL loans 281 8 billion 13 5 million borrowers The program ended in 2010 Perkins loans 7 1 billion 2 3 million borrowers The program ended in 2018 Total 1 4392 trillion 42 9 million borrowers Loans to parents edit See also PLUS loanPLUS loans are federal education loans made to parents 80 These have much higher loan limits usually enough to cover costs that exceed student financial aid Payments start immediately after education ends although prepayment is allowed Credit history is considered thus approval is not automatic Interest accrues during the time the student is in school PLUS interest rates as of 2017 were 7 81 The parents are personally responsible for repayment The parents sign the master promissory note and are accountable Parents are advised to consider their monthly payments Loan documents reflect the repayment schedule for a single year Since most students borrow again each year the ultimate payments are much higher PLUS loans consider credit history making it more difficult for low income parents to qualify Graduate students are eligible to receive PLUS loans in their own names Graduate PLUS loans have the same interest rates and terms as those to parents Federal Direct Student Loans also known as Direct Loans or FDLP loans originate with the United States Treasury FDLP loans are distributed by the DOE then to the college or university and then to the student 82 Debt levels edit nbsp Distribution of student loan debt in the U S Loan limits are below the cost of most four year private institutions and most public universities Students add private student loans to make up the difference 17 The maximum amount that any student can borrow is adjusted as federal policies change Defaults edit Out of 100 students who ever attended a for profit institution 23 defaulted in the 1996 cohort compared to 43 in the 2004 cohort compared to an increase from 8 to 11 among borrowers who never attended a for profit 83 As of 2018 black BA graduates defaulted at five times the rate of white BA graduates 21 versus 4 percent and were more likely to default than white dropouts 83 Private loans editMain article Private student loansPrivate loans are offered by banks or finance companies They are not guaranteed by a government agency Private loans cost more offer less favorable terms and are generally used only when students have exhausted the federal borrowing limit They are not eligible for Income Based Repayment plans and frequently have less flexible payment terms higher fees and more penalties than federal student loans 16 17 84 Private loans may be difficult to discharge through bankruptcy 85 Private loans are made to students or parents They have higher limits and no payments until after education although interest starts to accrue immediately and the deferred interest is added to the principal Interest rates are higher on federal loans which are set by the United States Congress 86 The advantage of private student loans is that they do not include loan or total debt limits They typically offer a no payment grace period of six months occasionally 12 months Most experts recommend private loans only as a last resort because of the less favorable terms 87 88 Loan servicers editThe U S Department of Education contracts with companies to manage or service the loans it owns These companies are the primary point of contact for borrowers after they graduate and enter repayment A student loan servicer is a company which facilitates different aspects of a loan The servicing group will typically be responsible for maintaining records on a particular loan handling loan distribution and providing requested information to the loan recipient 89 US student loan servicers include Navient FedLoan Servicing PHEAA MOHELA HESC EdFinancial Granite State GSMR OSLA Servicing and Debt Management and Collections System 90 In recent years some student loan servicers have gone under legal scrutiny for alleged wrongdoing Navient formerly Sallie Mae was charged with multiple class action lawsuits for their loan servicing methods Navient was also sued by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau CFPB for improper handling of borrower relations FedLoan has also received public pressure for possible mistreatment of loan recipients 91 As of July 2023 update the four companies which service the majority of student loans are Aidvantage EdFinancial Services MOHELA Higher Education Loan Authority of the State of Missouri and Nelnet 92 ECSI Educational Computer Systems Inc is the exclusive servicer for the remaining Perkins Loans Borrowers who have defaulted on loans are assigned to the Department of Education s Default Resolution Group for servicing Student loan asset backed securities SLABS editFFELP and private loans are bundled securitized rated then sold to institutional investors as student loan asset backed securities SLABS Navient and Nelnet are two major private lenders 93 Wells Fargo Bank JP MorganChase Goldman Sachs and other large banks package and sell SLABS in bundles Moody s Fitch Ratings and Standard and Poor s rate SLAB quality 94 The Asset Backed Security ABS industry received financial relief in 2008 and in 2020 through the Term Asset Backed Securities Loan Facility TALF program which was created to preserve the flow of credit to consumers and businesses including student loans 95 In 2020 critics argued that the SLAB market was poorly regulated and could be headed toward a significant downturn despite perceptions that it was low risk 96 Repayment and default editMetrics edit The industry metrics are repayment rate 97 and default rate such as the one three 98 five 8 and seven year default rates 99 DOE s College Scorecard includes the following repayment statuses Making Progress Forbearance Deferment Not Making Progress clarification needed Delinquent Defaulted Paid In Full Discharged Repayment rate edit The three year repayment rate for each school that receives Title IV funding is available at DOE s College Scorecard 99 This number may be a poor indicator of the overall default rate some schools place loans into forbearance deferring loans beyond the three year window to present a low default rate 100 101 Default rate edit The default rate for borrowers who did not complete their degree is three times as high as the rate for those who did 4 1 Standard repayment edit Federal loans are initially designated as standard repayment 102 Standard repayment borrowers have 10 years to repay The loan servicer calculates the monthly payment amount that will pay off the original loan amount plus all accrued interest after 120 equal payments Payments cover interest and part of the principal Some loan terms may be shorter than 10 years The minimum monthly payment varies in amount but is usually within the range of 50 100 Income related repayment edit Income based repayment edit Main article Income based repayment Income based repayment options in the United States consist four plans Four IDRs are available Income Based Repayment IBR Pay As You Earn PAYE Saving on a Valuable Education SAVE which replaced Revised Pay As You Earn REPAYE in 2023 Income Contingent Repayment ICR These plans limit monthly payments to a percentage of discretionary income and forgive unpaid balances after a certain number of years 103 Income share agreements edit Main article Income Share Agreement An income share agreement is an alternative to a traditional loan The borrower agrees to pay a percentage of their salary to the educational institution after graduation 104 Purdue University offers income share agreements 105 Defenses to repayment edit Under some circumstances debt can be cancelled For example students who attended a school when it closed or the student was enrolled based on false claims may be able to escape repayment 106 Leaving the country to evade repayment edit Debt evasion is the intentional act of trying to avoid attempts by creditors to collect a debt News accounts report that some individuals are departing the US to escape their debt Emigration does not discharge the loan or stop interest and penalties from accruing 107 International addresses make it more difficult to find people and collection companies would usually need to hire an international counsel or a third party collector to recoup the debt cutting into their profits and reducing their incentive to go after a debtor It increases our expenses to go overseas says Justin Berg of American Profit Recovery a debt collection agency in Massachusetts Our revenues are cut by more than half he says Nations may enter into agreements with the US to facilitate the collection of student loans 108 After default co signers remain liable for repayment 109 110 Bankruptcy editMain article Student loan default in the United StatesFederal loans and some private loans can be discharged in bankruptcy by demonstrating that the loan does not meet the requirements of section 523 a 8 111 of the bankruptcy code or by showing that repayment of the loan would constitute undue hardship While credit card debt often can be discharged through bankruptcy proceedings 112 113 this option is not generally available for federally subsidize or insured student loans 114 115 Unless the loan can be proven not to be an educational benefit 116 those seeking to discharge their debt must initiate an adversary proceeding a separate lawsuit within the bankruptcy case where they illustrate the required hardship 117 Many borrowers cannot afford the costs to retain an attorney or litigation costs associated with an adversary proceeding such as a bankruptcy case The undue hardship standard varies from jurisdiction to jurisdiction but is generally difficult to meet In most circuit courts discharge depends on meeting the three prongs in the Brunner test 118 As noted by the district court there is very little appellate authority on the definition of undue hardship in the context of 11 U S C 523 a 8 B Based on legislative history and the decisions of other district and bankruptcy courts the district court adopted a standard for undue hardship requiring a three part showing 1 that the debtor cannot maintain based on current income and expenses a minimal standard of living for herself and her dependents if forced to repay the loans 2 that additional circumstances exist indicating that this state of affairs is likely to persist for a significant portion of the repayment period of the student loans and 3 that the debtor has made good faith efforts to repay the loans For the reasons set forth in the district court s order we adopt this analysis The first part of this test has been applied frequently as the minimum necessary to establish undue hardship See e g Bryant v Pennsylvania Higher Educ Assistance Agency In re Bryant 72 B R 913 915 Bankr E D Pa 1987 North Dakota State Bd of Higher Educ v Frech In re Frech 62 B R 235 Bankr D Minn 1986 Marion v Pennsylvania Higher Educ Assistance Agency In re Marion 61 B R 815 Bankr W D Pa 1986 Requiring such a showing comports with common sense as well 119 Federal student loans may be eligible for administrative discharge Those provisions do not apply to private loans although private loans may be subject to discharge in bankruptcy 85 One study found that a quarter million student debtors file for bankruptcy each year Approximately 450 attempted to seek a discharge in 2017 by arguing that their loan was not an educational benefit as defined by section 523 a 8 or they successfully argued for undue hardship Of the completed cases more than 60 were able to discharge their debts or achieve a settlement 120 The study concluded that the data showed 121 Creditors are settling unfavorable cases to avoid adverse precedent and litigating good cases to cultivate favorable precedent Ultimately this litigation strategy has distorted the law and cultivated the myth of nondischargeability The study found that debtors who obtain favorable outcomes do not possess unique characteristics differentiating them from those who do not seek discharge and estimates that 64 000 individuals who filed for bankruptcy in 2019 would have met the hardship standard It concluded about half of all bankrupt debtors could obtain relief except that they had become convinced that loans were not dischargeable 121 For disabled debtors the standard is whether substantial gainful activity SGA is still possible Borrowers determined to be disabled by the Social Security Administration are eligible if the SSA placed the individual on a five to seven year review cycle 26 Debt discharged due to death or total permanent disability is nontaxable 27 In three circuit court jurisdictions private student loans are dischargeable in bankruptcy 43 44 Criticisms editSchool effects edit Some critics of financial aid in general claim that it allows schools to raise their fees to accept unprepared students and to produce too many graduates in some fields of study 122 In 1987 then Secretary of Education William Bennett argued that increases in financial aid in recent years have enabled colleges and universities blithely to raise tuition confident that Federal loan subsidies would help cushion the increase 123 This statement came to be known as the Bennett Hypothesis In July 2015 a Federal Reserve Bank of New York Staff Report concluded that institutions more exposed to increases in student loan program maximums tended to respond with disproportionate tuition increases Pell Grant subsidized and unsubsidized loans led to increases of about 40 60 and 15 cents on the dollar respectively In the 20 years between 1987 and 2007 tuition costs rose 326 124 Public universities increased their fees by 27 over the five years ending in 2012 or 20 adjusted for inflation Public university students paid an average of almost 8 400 annually for in state tuition while out of state students paid more than 19 000 For the two decades ending in 2013 college costs rose 1 6 more than inflation each year By contrast government funding per student fell 27 between 2007 and 2012 125 126 Many students cannot get loans or determine that the cost of going to school is not worth the debt believing that they would still be unable to make enough income to pay it back 127 Some universities steered borrowers to preferred lenders that charged higher interest rates Some of these lenders allegedly paid kick backs to university financial aid staff After the behavior became public many universities rebated fees to affected borrowers 128 129 Interest rates edit The federal student loan program was criticized for not adjusting interest rates according to factors under students control such as the choice of academic major Critics have contended that flat rate pricing contributes to inefficiency and misallocation of resources in higher education and lower productivity in the labor market 16 However one study found that high debt and default levels do not burden society substantially 130 Bankruptcy edit In 2009 student loans non dischargeability was claimed to provide a credit risk free loan for the lender averaging 7 percent a year 131 Long term debt and default edit About one third of borrowers never pay off their loans Those who default shift their burden to taxpayers 122 According to Harvard Business School researchers when student debt is erased a huge burden is lifted and people take big steps to improve their lives They seek higher paying careers in new states improve their education get their other finances in order and make more substantial contributions to the economy 132 A June 2023 report by the Jain Family Institute concluded that much of the outstanding 1 8 trillion in student loan debt will never be repaid as more and more borrowers are unable to repay and the cancelling of a large portion of outstanding student debt will be inevitable The increased necessity of higher education to attain employment means more and more people are forced to take out loans Stagnating wages rising tuition and the shrinking of government funding for higher education result in more and more borrowers being unable to repay and are forced to carry that debt burden well into the future impairing economic well being for a widening and diversifying swath of the population inhibiting savings increasing precarity and draining the very incomes the student debt was supposed to increase The report says that unless something changes future generations will suffer the same consequences of student loan debt as millennials have including delayed marriages reduced childbearing less entrepreneurship and decreased retirement security among others 133 134 Sallie Mae and Nelnet edit Sallie Mae and Nelnet are the largest lenders and are frequently defendants in lawsuits The False Claims Suit was filed on behalf of the federal government by former DOE researcher Dr Jon Oberg against Sallie Mae Nelnet and other lenders Oberg argued that the lenders overcharged the United States Government and defrauded taxpayers of over 22 million In August 2010 Nelnet settled and paid 55 million 135 Ultimately seven lenders returned taxpayer funds as a result of his lawsuits 136 School quality editIn April 2019 Brookings Institution fellow Adam Looney a long time analyst of student loans claimed that It is an outrage that the federal government offers loans to students at low quality institutions even when we know those schools don t boost their earnings and that those borrowers won t be able to repay their loans It is an outrage that we make parent PLUS loans to the poorest families when we know they almost surely will default and have their wages and social security benefits garnished and their tax refunds confiscated as 2 8 billion was in 2017 It is an outrage that we saddled several million students with loans to enroll in untested online programs that seem to have offered no labor market value It is an outrage that our lending programs encourage schools like USC to charge 107 484 and students to blithely enroll for a master s degree in social work 220 percent more than the equivalent course at UCLA in a field where the median wage is 47 980 It s no wonder many borrowers feel their student loans led to economic catastrophe 137 Potential consequences of student loan debt edit While college grads earn about 70 more than people with only a high school degree 138 student loan debt has been associated with several social economic and psychological consequences including having to choose less satisfying work that pays more lower credit ratings from missed payments that may disqualify borrowers from work opportunities given poor payment history reduced wealth accumulation reduced housing access delayed marriage delayed childbirth decreased retirement security 139 increased anxiety 138 140 141 142 143 144 Reform proposals editOrganizations that advocate for student loan reform include the Debt Collective and Student Loan Justice 145 146 147 Some pundits proposed that colleges share liability on defaulted student loans 148 149 150 Sen Bernie Sanders I Vt and Rep Pramila Jayapal D Wash introduced legislation in 2017 to make public colleges and universities tuition free for working families and to significantly reduce student debt The policy would eliminate undergraduate tuition and fees at public colleges and universities lower interest rates and allow those with existing debt to refinance 151 152 Sanders offered a new proposal in 2019 that would cancel 1 6 trillion of student loan undergraduate and graduate debt for around 45 million Americans 153 Senator Brian Schatz D Hawaii reintroduced the Debt Free College Act in 2019 154 155 In 2020 a majority of economists surveyed by the Initiative on Global Markets felt that forgiving all student loans would be more beneficial to higher income earners than lower income earners 156 During the 2020 presidential election then candidate Joe Biden said he planned to allow 10 000 in debt forgiveness to all student debtors On August 24 2022 Biden announced that he would forgive an amount of 10 000 for an estimated 43 million borrowers and an additional 10 000 for Pell Grant recipients with this relief limited to singles earning under 125 000 and married couples earning under 250 000 157 including refunding payments during the forbearance period by any borrower who requests it 158 This would reduce debt for an estimated 43 million borrowers and eliminate student loan debt for an estimated 20 million 159 The Congressional Budget Office estimated that it would cost the government about 400 billion 160 161 162 The administration also proposed a new income driven repayment plan 163 The U S Supreme Court ruled June 30 2023 in Biden v Nebraska that Biden s plan required action by Congress and that the HEROES Act did not permit the administration to act on its own 164 Some borrowers still have loans issued under the Federal Family Education Loan Program which closed in 2010 The Biden forgiveness plan originally allowed these borrowers to receive forgiveness by consolidating into Direct Loans but due to potential lawsuits stopped allowing this on September 29 2022 potentially excluding 800 000 FFEL borrowers 165 160 In February 2024 the Biden administration announced it would cancel 1 2 billion of student debt The debt cancellation applies only to those enrolled in the Saving on a Valuable Education SAVE repayment plan who have been making payments for at least 10 years and who originally borrowed 12 000 or less for school 166 In April 2024 Biden announced plans to ease student loan debt benefiting 23 million Americans The plans included cancellation of up to 20 000 of accrued interest regardless of income and automatic cancellation of debt for borrowers who were eligible for certain forgiveness programs who had entered repayment decades ago who had enrolled in low financial value programs or who had been experiencing hardship 167 See also editStudent financial aid in the United States College tuition in the United States EdFund Free education Higher Education Price Index Tertiary education Private university Student debt Student loan Tuition payments Tuition freezeReferences edit a b Hess Abigail Johnson February 15 2018 Here s how much the average student loan borrower owes when they graduate CNBC Retrieved December 20 2021 Ahart Alan M 2021 How the Courts Have Gone Astray in Refusing to Discharge Student Loans The Folly of Brunner of Rewriting Repayment Terms of Issuing Partial Discharges and of Considering Income Based Repayment Plans American Bankruptcy Law Journal 95 53 Black Sandra E Denning Jeffrey T Dettling Lisa J Goodman Sarena Turner Lesley J 2023 Taking It to the Limit Effects of Increased Student Loan Availability on Attainment Earnings and Financial Well Being American Economic Review 113 12 3357 3400 doi 10 1257 aer 20210926 hdl 10919 100563 ISSN 0002 8282 a b c d e Nadworny Elissa July 9 2019 These Are The People Struggling The Most To Pay Back Student Loans NPR Archived from the original on July 12 2019 Retrieved July 12 2019 a b c Weissmann Jordan July 16 2021 Master s Degrees Are the Second Biggest Scam in Higher Education And elite universities deserve a huge share of the blame Slate Anyone who reads about how we have 1 7 trillion in outstanding student loan debt should always keep in mind that almost half of all new student loans in particular are for graduate school not for undergraduate You hear somebody that s got 200 000 or 300 000 in debt they almost surely went to graduate school They didn t borrow that much money from the Department of Education to get a bachelor s degree David O Lucca Taylor Nadauld Karen Shen July 2015 Credit Supply and the Rise in College Tuition Evidence from the Expansion in Federal Student Aid programs Federal Reserve Bank of New York David O Lucca Taylor Nadauld Karen Shen July 2015 Credit Supply and the Rise in College Tuition Evidence from the Expansion in Federal Student Aid programs Federal Reserve Bank of New York We study the link between the student credit expansion of the past fifteen years and the contemporaneous rise in college tuition To disentangle simultaneity issues we analyze the effects of federal student loan caps increases using detailed student level financial data We find a pass through effect on tuition of changes in subsidized loan maximums of about 60 cents on the dollar and smaller but positive effects for unsubsidized federal loans The subsidized loan effect is most pronounced for more expensive degrees those offered by private institutions and for two year or vocational programs a b c Miller Ben August 25 2018 The Student Debt Problem Is Worse Than We Imagined The New York Times The New York Times Retrieved July 14 2019 For profit colleges increase students debt default risk Cornell Chronicle Retrieved August 25 2022 For profit colleges run by private companies that return profits to shareholders are a growing fixture of the U S higher education market serving almost 1 million students in 2018 or 5 of all enrollments That s up from 2 9 in 2000 though down from a peak of 9 6 in 2010 In 2012 39 of defaults on federal student loans occurred among borrowers who had attended for profit colleges nearly four times the percentage enrolled in the 2010 11 academic year https www brookings edu wp content uploads 2016 07 ConferenceDraft LooneyYannelis StudentLoanDefaults pdf bare URL PDF Danilova Maria October 5 2017 More than half of students at for profit colleges defaulted on loans study finds Chicago Tribune Retrieved December 20 2021 Turner Sarah April 13 2023 Student loan pause has benefitted affluent borrowers the most others may struggle when payments resume Brookings Retrieved April 24 2023 Boehm Eric April 21 2023 Biden s student loan pause overwhelmingly benefited wealthier Americans Reason com Retrieved April 24 2023 Federal Role in Education www2 ed gov May 25 2017 Retrieved June 9 2018 U S Senate Sputnik Spurs Passage of the National Defense Education Act www senate gov Retrieved June 9 2018 a b c d e f Michael Simkovic Risk Based Student Loans 2012 a b c d Jonathan Glater 2011 The Other Big Test Why Congress Should Allow College Students to Borrow More Through Federal Aid Programs New York University Journal of Legislation and Public Policy 14 doi 10 2139 ssrn 1871305 S2CID 73635531 BSC alum was first federal loan recipient bismarckstate edu Bank of North Dakota will end student loan program Bismarck Tribune March 30 2010 Best Joel Best Eric May 2 2014 The Student Loan Mess How Good Intentions Created a Trillion Dollar Problem Univ of California Press ISBN 978 0520276451 Woo Jennie H and ED National Center for Education Statistics The Expansion of Private Loans in Postsecondary Education Stats in Brief NCES 2012 184 National Center For Education Statistics 2011 ERIC Web May 21 2014 a b SANTO JR G F amp RALL L L 2010 Private Student Loan Financing in an Era of Needs and Challenges Journal of Structured Finance 16 3 106 115 Federal Perkins Loan Program Federal Family Education Loan Program and William D Ford Federal Direct Loan Program Docket ID ED 2009 OPE 0004 Regulations gov August 25 2009 Kantrowitz Mark Total College Debt Now Exceeds Total Credit Card Debt fastweb Retrieved August 1 2014 Student Loans Owned and Securitized Outstanding Research stlouisfed org New York Federal Reserve April 7 2016 Web April 19 2016 1 a b 77 FR 66088 a b Campbell Patrick Frotman Seth February 7 2018 Help is here for people with severe disabilities struggling with student loans CFPB Consumer Financial Protection Bureau Retrieved April 18 2018 Sahadi Jeanne December 20 2017 Enjoy your tax cuts while they last CNN Money Retrieved April 18 2018 P2P Lending amp Education CommonBond Launches With 3 5M Joining SoFi In Quest To Solve The Student Debt Crisis TechCrunch December 1 2012 SoFi Tapping Alumni to Help With Student Loans The New York Times April 3 2012 Lobosco Katie 8 million Americans could get a lower rate on their student loans CNN Money 15 November 2016 Retrieved on 10 March 2017 Federal Reserve Bank of New York February 2017 Quarterly Report on Household Debt and Credit PDF Retrieved March 23 2017 U S Department of Education Announces Final Regulations to Protect Students and Taxpayers from Predatory Institutions U S Department of Education U S Dept of Education October 28 2016 Retrieved May 31 2020 Kroll Andy July 25 2018 Betsy DeVos New Proposal Aligns Her With For Profit Colleges Over Debt Saddled Students Rolling Stone Retrieved May 31 2020 Friedman Zack May 29 2020 Trump Vetoes Student Loan Forgiveness Bill Forbes Retrieved May 31 2020 Vigdor Neil August 22 2019 Trump Orders Student Loan Forgiveness for Disabled Veterans The New York Times Retrieved August 22 2019 Turner Cory Judge rules to erase the student loans of 200K borrowers who say they were ripped off www npr org National Public Radio Retrieved February 26 2023 Calonia Jennifer September 4 2021 What to do if you can t pay your loans during the pandemic www seattletimes com Seattle Times Retrieved September 29 2021 Thakker Prem November 1 2022 Biden Extends Pause on Student Loan Payments The New Republic ISSN 0028 6583 Retrieved November 23 2022 Carpenter Julia May 3 2022 When Student Loan Debt Paused These Borrowers Kept Paying The Wall Street Journal Retrieved May 4 2022 Kantrowitz Mark July 28 2021 Why Are Student Loan Servicers Dropping Out hecollegeinvestor com The College Investor Retrieved September 29 2021 Giovanetti Erika August 3 2021 1 in 8 families borrowed private student loans in 2020 21 school year Here s how to do it right www foxbusiness com Fox Business Retrieved August 16 2021 a b Redden Elizabeth July 16 2021 Appeals Court Rules Private Loans Dischargeable in Bankruptcy www insidehighered com Inside Higher Education Retrieved July 18 2021 a b Gladstone Alexander July 15 2021 Consensus Builds That Some Private Student Loans Can Be Wiped Out in Bankruptcy The Wall Street Journal Retrieved July 18 2021 Korn Melissa August 19 2021 U S to Eliminate Student Debt for Borrowers With Permanent Disabilities The Wall Street Journal Retrieved August 20 2021 Sheffey Ayelet The Supreme Court just ruled that 6 billion in student loan forgiveness for 200 000 borrowers can move forward www businessinsider com Business Insider Retrieved April 15 2023 a b c Dickler Jessica Nova Annie May 6 2022 This is how student loan debt became a 1 7 trillion crisis CNBC Retrieved July 8 2022 Over the 30 years between 1991 92 and 2021 22 average tuition prices more than doubled increasing to 10 740 from 4 160 at public four year colleges and to 38 070 from 19 360 at private institutions after adjusting for inflation according to the College Board With nearly no limit on the amount students can borrow to help cover the rising cost of college there is an incentive to drive up tuition she said Now schools can charge as much as they want Diana Furchtgott Roth an economics professor at George Washington University and former chief economist at the Department of Labor added Howe Amy February 13 2023 In a pair of challenges to student debt relief big questions about agency authority and the right to sue www scotusblog com Scotus Blog Retrieved February 26 2023 Acevedo Nicole January 5 2023 Student loan borrowers thought they were getting relief Now courts have put their lives on hold www nbcnews com NBC News Retrieved February 26 2023 US Supreme Court blocks Biden s 400bn loan forgiveness plan BBC Furman Jason July 19 2016 The Truth About Higher Education And Student Loans Huffington Post Retrieved June 4 2018 Hess Abigail July 13 2017 Here s how much it costs to go to college in the US compared to other countries CNBC Retrieved June 9 2018 Nova Annie June 30 2021 Student loan bills are set to restart in October But another extension is still possible CNBC Retrieved July 12 2021 a b c Pan Maoyuan Dan Lou 2008 A Comparative Analysis On Models of Higher Education Massification Frontiers of Education in China 3 1 64 78 doi 10 1007 s11516 008 0004 8 S2CID 195309522 Student Loans Consumer Information www consumer ftc gov Retrieved November 11 2015 Subsidized and Unsubsidized Loans Federal Student Aid May 1 2018 Retrieved June 9 2018 Consumer Financial Protection Bureau 2012 Private Student Loans See also Report Details Woes of Student Loan Debt NYT FinAid Student Loans Archived from the original on September 6 2008 Retrieved March 22 2015 Parents Wealth and Racial Disparities in College Debt St Louis Fed www stlouisfed org Ozymy Joshua March 2012 The Poverty of Participation Self Interest Student Loans and Student Activism Political Behavior 34 1 103 116 doi 10 1007 s11109 010 9154 5 S2CID 254947912 Goldstein Dana May 20 2019 The Morehouse Gift in Context An Average Black Graduate Has 7 400 More in Debt Than White Peers The New York Times Berman Jillian 12 years after starting college white men have paid off 44 of their student loans while black women owe 13 more MarketWatch DeMatteo Megan December 12 2020 Here s the average student loan debt by age CNBC Gravler Elizabeth April 25 2021 Here s the average student debt balance of borrowers under 25 CNBC Retrieved July 12 2021 Gravier Elizabeth June 21 2021 Here s the average student loan debt of borrowers 35 to 49 years old CNBC Retrieved July 12 2021 The Difference Between Stafford amp Perkins Loans Retrieved June 9 2018 Archived copy Archived from the original on November 11 2011 Retrieved September 6 2009 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Requisitos para otros formularios Solicitud de cancelacion por incapacidad total y permanente Archived from the original on September 10 2009 Retrieved September 6 2009 Higher Education Opportunity Act 2008 Ed gov June 28 2010 Retrieved February 15 2014 Wondering whether you can get your federal student loans forgiven or canceled for your service as a teacher FederalStudentAid gov Public Service Loan Forgiveness Federal Student Aid Studentaid ed gov Retrieved February 15 2014 Public Service Loan Forgiveness Federal Student Aid December 12 2017 Retrieved January 17 2018 Public Service Loan Forgiveness FinAid org See also H R 2669 110th College Cost Reduction and Access Act Library of Congress Summary U S Code Archived from the original on June 7 2011 Borrower Defense www ed gov US Department of Education Retrieved April 19 2023 Loans Federal William D Ford Direct Loans Types of Financial Aid Student Financial Services Student Life Iona College www iona edu Retrieved June 9 2018 Understanding Repayment Federal Student Aid May 3 2018 Retrieved June 9 2018 Expected Family Contribution EFC fafsa ed gov Retrieved June 9 2018 IFAP Dear Colleague Letter Ifap ed gov Archived from the original on March 20 2009 Retrieved February 15 2014 PLUS Loans Federal Student Aid February 26 2018 Retrieved June 9 2018 Interest Rates and Fees Federal Student Aid August 3 2017 Retrieved December 13 2017 Federal Student Loan Programs Data Book Introduction www2 ed gov Retrieved June 9 2018 a b Judith Scott Clayton January 10 2018 The looming student loan default crisis is worse than we thought PDF Retrieved August 28 2018 Philip G Schrag amp Charles W Pruett Coordinating Loan Repayment Assistance Programs with New Federal Legislation 60 J LEGAL EDUC 583 590 597 2010 a b Cameron Robert G April 12 2022 Busting myths about bankruptcy and private student loans Consumer Financial Protection Bureau Retrieved June 17 2023 Federal Versus Private Loans Federal Student Aid May 10 2017 Retrieved June 9 2018 New changes will do you good if you have student loans USA Today July 1 2008 Retrieved May 24 2010 Private Loans Deepen a Crisis in Student Debt The New York Times June 10 2007 Retrieved May 24 2010 What is a student loan servicer Consumer Financial Protection Bureau Archived from the original on October 5 2020 Retrieved October 3 2020 Contact Your Federal Student Loan Servicer StudentLoans gov Archived from the original on October 31 2019 Retrieved December 23 2018 Works Equal Justice Community ContributorHelping Lawyers Help September 12 2017 Mismanaged Student Debt Forgiveness Leads to FedLoan Lawsuit HuffPost Archived from the original on April 12 2019 Retrieved October 3 2020 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a first2 has generic name help Kantrowitz Mark July 28 2021 Why Are Student Loan Servicers Dropping Out The College Investor Retrieved September 29 2021 Bailey Samantha Ryan Christopher J The Next Big Short COVID 19 Student Loan Discharge in Bankruptcy and the SLABS Market scholar smu edu SMU Law Review Retrieved July 18 2021 Campbell Eli J Wall Street has been gambling with student loan debt for decades www opendemocracy net Open Democracy Retrieved July 18 2021 Term Asset Backed Securities Loan Facility www federalreserve gov US Federal Reserve Retrieved July 17 2021 Bailey Samantha R Ryan Christopher J The Next Big Short COVID 19 Student Loan Discharge in Bankruptcy and the SLABS Marke scholar smu edu SMU Law Review Trends in Student Aid College Board Research research collegeboard org Getting Repayment Rates Right Center for American Progress July 10 2018 a b Kelchen Robert September 28 2017 Examining Trends in Student Loan Repayment Rates Student Loan Default Rates Are Easily Gamed Here s a Better Measure March 26 2015 Kreighbaum Andrew April 27 2018 GAO Colleges Consultants Game Rules to Lower Default Rates www insidehighered com Government Accountability Office Retrieved July 11 2021 How Standard Repayment Works American Student Assistance Archived from the original on June 11 2010 Retrieved June 8 2010 Andrew Martin September 8 2012 Debt Collectors Cashing In on Student Loan Roundup The New York Times Retrieved September 9 2012 So You Want to Offer an Income Share Agreement Here s How 5 Colleges Are Doing It EdSurge News EdSurge February 15 2019 Retrieved June 17 2019 Income Share Agreements Division of Financial Aid Purdue University www purdue edu Retrieved June 17 2019 Loan Forgiveness Borrower Defense Data a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Students escape loan debt by living overseas Oct 24 2008 money cnn com Retrieved June 15 2019 Cherastidtham Ittima May 4 2015 Collecting student loans from overseas debtors just a start The Conversation Retrieved June 16 2019 I had to escape this debtors prison College grad flees U S to avoid student loan debt The York Daily Record Retrieved June 12 2019 Nova Annie May 25 2019 These Americans fled the country to escape their giant student debt CNBC Retrieved June 12 2019 Bankruptcy 523 Exceptions to discharge FindLaw Is credit card debt discharged in bankruptcy Illinois Legal Aid Online Illinois Legal Aid Retrieved June 17 2023 Bankrupt Maxed Out In America transcript American RadioWorks 2011 Kosel Janice E January 1981 Running the Gauntlet of Undue Hardship The Discharge of Student Loans in Bankruptcy Golden Gate University Law Review 11 2 459 Salvin Robert F 1996 Student Loans Bankruptcy and the Fresh Start Policy Must Debtors Be Impoverished to Discharge Educational Loans Tulane Law Review 71 139 The Misinterpretation of 11 U S C 523 a 8 PDF American Bankruptcy Institute Filing an Adversary Proceeding AP Without an Attorney Northern District of Florida Flnb uscourts gov Retrieved August 24 2013 Ron Lieber August 31 2012 Last Plea on School Loans Proving a Hopeless Future The New York Times Retrieved September 1 2012 Marie Brunner Appellant v New York State Higher Education Services Corp Appellee 831 F 2d 395 United States Court of Appeals Second Circuit Argued Sept 22 1987 Decided Oct 14 1987 Whether not discharging Brunner s student loans would impose on her undue hardship under 11 U S C 523 a 8 B requires a conclusion regarding the legal effect of the bankruptcy court s findings as to her circumstances Student Loan Bankruptcy Gap Yahoo Finance November 12 2020 a b Iuliano Jason October 21 2020 Student Loan Bankruptcy Gap Duke Law Journal SSRN 3715975 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help a b Vedder Richard Denhart Christopher Hartge Joseph June 2014 Dollars Cents and Nonsense The Harmful Effects of Federal Student Aid Center for College Affordability and Productivity archived from the original on July 10 2014 retrieved November 23 2014 Bennett William J Our Greedy Colleges Nytimes com The New York Times Company February 18 1987 Web April 28 2016 2 Best and Keppo 2014 Creative destruction The Economist June 28 2014 The digital degree The Economist June 27 2014 Best K amp Keppo J 2014 The credits that count how credit growth and financial aid affect college tuition and fees Education Economics 22 6 589 613 doi 10 1080 09645292 2012 687102 Cuomo School loan corruption widespread U S A Today April 10 2007 Retrieved April 8 2008 Lederman Doug May 15 2007 The First Casualty Inside Higher Education Retrieved April 8 2008 Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City Student Loans Overview and Issues August 2012 PDF Retrieved February 15 2014 Collinge Alan The student loan scam the most oppressive debt in U S history and how we can fight back Boston MA Beacon Press c2009 ISBN 978 0 8070 4229 8LCCN 2008 12230 Forgiving Student Loan Debt Leads to Better Jobs Stronger Consumers May 22 2019 Adamczyk Alicia June 27 2023 Much of the 1 8 trillion in student debt won t ever be repaid nonpartisan research organization says The government is poised to take a bath on its student loan portfolio Fortune Retrieved June 29 2023 Nilaj Eduard et al June 15 2023 The Repayment Pause and the Continuing Crisis of Non Repayment Jain Family Institute Retrieved June 29 2023 Field Kelly August 15 2010 Nelnet to Pay 55 Million to Resolve Whistle Blower Lawsuit The Chronicle of Higher Education Retrieved July 14 2011 Moldea Dan E 2020 Money Politics and Corruption in U S Higher Education The Stories of Whistleblowers Moldea com ISBN 978 0578661155 A better way to provide relief to student loan borrowers April 30 2019 a b Hess Abigail Johnson July 2 2021 3 ways student debt impacts the economy www cnbc com CNBC Retrieved September 30 2021 Adamczyk Alicia June 27 2023 Much of the 1 8 trillion in student debt won t ever be repaid nonpartisan research organization says The government is poised to take a bath on its student loan portfolio Fortune Retrieved June 30 2023 MCCLENNEN SOPHIA A May 8 2021 Universities are still not held accountable for the student debt mental health crisis www salon com Salon Retrieved September 30 2021 Dickler Jessica May 22 2018 Student loan debt is a hurdle for many would be mothers www cnbc com CNBC Retrieved September 30 2021 Menton Jessica In sickness and in health but not in debt Young Americans avoid I do until student loans are paid off USA Today Retrieved September 30 2021 Ungarino Rebecca October 7 2014 Burdened with Record Amount of Debt Graduates Delay Marriage www nbcnews com NBC News Retrieved September 30 2021 Nau Michael Dwyer Rachel E Hodson Randy December 2015 Can t afford a baby Debt and young Americans Res Soc Stratif Mobil 42 114 122 doi 10 1016 j rssm 2015 05 003 PMC 5231614 PMID 28090131 Nova Annie December 21 2018 For some student loan debt is doubling tripling and even quadrupling CNBC Vasquez Michael March 9 2019 The Nightmarish End of the Dream Center s Higher Ed Empire The Chronicle of Higher Education Retrieved April 2 2019 Jaffe Sarah February 23 2015 We won t pay students in debt take on for profit college institution The Guardian Retrieved May 23 2021 Carlson Tucker March 19 2019 Tucker Carlson Congress must address the student loan debt problem and stop colleges from scamming our kids Tucker Carlson Fox News Retrieved April 2 2019 Nilsen Ella March 28 2019 Trump s vision for higher education is limiting student loans and prioritizing for profit colleges Vox Retrieved April 2 2019 Kirk Charlie March 21 2019 Student loan debt The government broke it and must fix it The Hill Retrieved April 2 2019 Gregorian Dareh March 30 2019 Growing student debt crisis Candidates say cancel it free college refinance Share this 2020 Election Growing student debt crisis Candidates say cancel it free college refinance NBC News Retrieved April 2 2019 College for All Act Introduced Senator Bernie Sanders Bernie Sanders unveils plan to cancel all 1 6 trillion of student loan debt CNN June 24 2019 Retrieved June 24 2019 Kreighbaum Andrew March 7 2019 Senator Pushes Debt Free as Solution for College Costs Inside Higher Ed Retrieved April 2 2019 S 672 Debt Free College Act of 2019 Congress gov Library of Congress March 6 2019 Retrieved April 2 2019 Student Debt Forgiveness Initiative on Global Markets November 24 2020 Archived from the original on January 16 2021 Biden will forgive 10k in student loans for millions of Americans National Globalnews ca globalnews ca Retrieved August 24 2022 The government will refund you any student loan payments made since March 2020 e3d news September 16 2022 Retrieved September 16 2022 Biden cancels up to 20 000 in student loan debt for millions of Americans extends payment pause www cbsnews com August 24 2022 Retrieved August 26 2022 a b Turner Cory September 30 2022 A look inside the legal battle to stop Biden s student loan relief NPR The antipathy many conservatives feel toward President Biden s student debt relief plan which the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office recently estimated will cost roughly 400 billion is as vivid as many borrowers enthusiasm for it Costs of Suspending Student Loan Payments and Canceling Debt September 26 2022 Retrieved October 1 2022 CBO estimates that the cost of outstanding student loans to the federal government will increase by about 400 billion because of an executive action canceling some debt Turner Cory Carrillo Sequoia August 24 2022 Biden is canceling up to 10K in student loans 20K for Pell Grant recipients NPR In a May analysis the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget estimated a policy like the one Biden announced would cost at least 230 billion and warned that even income limits would do almost nothing to alleviate the central issues with the policy namely that it is regressive inflationary expensive and would likely do more to increase the cost of higher education going forward than to reduce it Liu Jennifer August 24 2022 Biden announces new plan to cut some student loan payments in half CNBC Retrieved August 28 2022 Hurley Lawrence Supreme Court kills Biden student loan relief plan NBC Retrieved June 30 2023 In a reversal the Education Dept is excluding many from student loan relief NPR org Chloe Kim February 21 2024 Biden cancels 1 2bn in student loans for more than 150 000 people BBC News Retrieved February 21 2024 Holland Steve Kelly Stephanie April 8 2024 Biden plans to cancel student loan debt 23 million Americans may be impacted Retrieved April 9 2024 Further reading editBest J and Best E 2014 The Student Loan Mess How Good Intentions Created a Trillion Dollar Problem Atkinson Family Foundation Hopkins Britain 2024 The Origins of the Student Loan Industry in the United States Richard Cornuelle United Student Aid Funds and the Creation of the Guaranteed Student Loan Program Journal of American History 110 4 667 688 Loonin Deanne Student loan law Collections intercepts deferments discharges repayment plans and trade school abuses Boston National Consumer Law Center June 30 2006 ISBN 978 1 60248 001 8 Schwarz Jon August 25 2022 The Origin of Student Debt Reagan Adviser Warned Free College Would Create a Dangerous Educated Proletariat The Intercept Student loan program A journey through the world of educational lending collection and litigation Mechanicsburg Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Bar Institute c2003 vii 300 p forms 28 cm ASIN B000IB82QA Wear Simmons Charlene Student Loans for Higher Education Sacramento California California Research Bureau California State Library 2008 59 pages ISBN 1 58703 233 3External links edit nbsp Look up student loans in the united states in Wiktionary the free dictionary College Inc PBS FRONTLINE documentary May 4 2010 Student Loan Debt Clock https studentaid gov understand aid types loans plus a b https studentaid gov understand aid types loans subsidized unsubsidized https studentaid gov manage loans consolidation a b https www mohela com DL resourceCenter glossary aspx a b https studentaid gov help center answers article ffel program https fsapartners ed gov knowledge center topics health education assistance loan heal information a b https studentaid gov help center answers article stafford loan Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Student loans in the United States amp 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