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Tuesday, April 10, 2007
Leslie Carbone :: Townhall.com Columnist
Student deadbeats vs. U.S. taxpayers
by Leslie Carbone
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American colleges accept a variety of financial incentives from some large student-loan companies, like Sallie Mae, to steer students to borrow from them, New York State Atty. Gen. Andrew Cuomo charged on March 15. Goodies include substantial cash payments, free trips to resort destinations for campus financial-aid officers, and company-manned call centers to answer students' financial-aid questions.

Mr. Cuomo's complaint will no doubt energize politicians eager to take credit for clipping the wings of private lenders who earn profits from federally guaranteed student loans. The alternative they favor would increase direct lending by the government.

But such a shift could increase the taxpayers' burden and drive up the overall costs of college.

As many taxpayers may not be aware, the U.S. Department of Education operates two competing loan programs, and the taxpayers bear the risk burdens of both. Under the William D. Ford Direct Loan Program, the department makes and administers loans directly to borrowers. Under the Federal Family Education Loan (FFEL) program, private companies provide the capital and administer the loans, but these loans are largely subsidized and insured by the federal government.

Some believe that one way to rein in costs would be to scale back the FFEL program and expand the Ford Direct Loan program, thereby cutting out the middleman and potentially reducing costs.

But the devil is in the details - or, in this case, the defaults. The default rates under the Ford Direct Loan Program are higher than under the FFEL program, and the gap is widening. When a college grad defaults on a federally insured student loan, the taxpayer is on the hook for most of the balance.

According to the Office of Management and Budget, the 2007 projected weighted average default rate under the FFEL program is 11.7 percent; under the Ford program, it is a whopping 16.65 percent. Already more than 3.1 million Direct Loans are expected, and taxpayers can expect an increased burden should the program be expanded.

What accounts for the difference in the default rates? Private companies have both the incentive and the ability to be innovative in keeping track of borrowers, enabling them to prevent and recover bad debts.

Students are a poor credit risk. They typically have limited credit histories, no secure jobs and an immature sense of responsibility. That's one of the main reasons why the federal government insures student loans. Continued...

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About The Author

Leslie Carbone is an adjunct scholar with the Lexington Institute.

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Loans
I am currently in a professional program at UNC-CH that there is no way I could have afforded were it not for college loans. I was working full-time with a mortgage and marriage and all that comes with them. I had the ability to pursue this professional program (pharmacy) because of the availability of student loans. Of course, when I finish this program, I will be able to find a job and pay back my loans. I am grateful that student loans exist. However, I am not so sure that student loans should go to subsidize degrees that are not goal, read gainful employment, attaining. I am not happy about subsidizing such "majors" as gender studies or identifying -isms in the 21st century. I am all about making loans available for the hard sciences, and even some of the "soft" ones like history, psychology and the like. At least with these a student has a chance of getting a decent job and being able to pay back loans. I don't know many jobs where being a women's studies major gives you a discrete advantage to get hired. Students should concentrate on learning real information instead of liberal drivel spewed by the modern crop of professors, many of whom should profess to be nothing more than an ignoramus.
Just my two cents, and I've been in the game a long time,

screeb

Sorry
Sorry for the duplication. Kept getting those error messages when I tried to post.

Good job, Townhall!
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