HIGHEREDWATCH.ORG

Student Loan 'Showdown'

September 19, 2006

The stage has been set for a showdown between the Secretary of Education and the Department of Education’s Inspector General. The two have taken different positions over a corporate welfare loophole worth billions of dollars in taxpayer payments to the student loan industry.  The Secretary ok'd use of the loophole by a small non-profit lender.  The IG said she was wrong.  But the big money showdown over a case with distinguishable facts is set to come.

In the Spring 2005, the IG audited a small New Mexico not-for-profit student loan organization and found that it had been incorrectly billing taxpayers for a subsidy that guaranteed itself a 9.5% rate of return on each student loan funded with refinanced tax-exempt bonds. A 9.5% return might not seem like a lot today, but in 2005 interest rates were less than 3.5%, making for a more than $30 million taxpayer payout to New Mexico for these loans.

Nelnet Sees the IG Report The trouble, according to the IG, is that Congress repealed the subsidy in 1993. What was the point of the repeal, the IG noted, if bonds used to support the loans in question could be refinanced forever with the inflated (and taxpayer subsidized) 9.5% return guarantee attaching to new loans issued years after 1993? It's what our favorite textbook on legislative interpretation calls the "meaningfulness doctrine."

So, the IG called for New Mexico to return its $30 million in 9.5% loan subsidy payments. But the Secretary disagreed and overruled the IG on grounds that the Department had approved the New Mexico 9.5% loan recycling procedure. The IG wrote to Congress that the Secretary was wrong.

But the big showdown is set to come over another far larger student loan provider that did something different and worse than New Mexico. Before New Mexico came to light, this senator smelled smoke (disclosure: Higher Ed Watch staff used to work for him) and called on the IG to audit the leading abuser of 9.5% loans -- the giant for-profit Nelnet corporation based in Lincoln, Nebraska. The IG responded and is supposed to release his audit this month.

It appears the IG's draft audit of Nelnet calls for a return to federal taxpayers of the $322 million in funds that Nelnet already has collected from taxpayers for its refinancings of 9.5% bonds plus a halting of future Nelnet planned billings of taxpayers that the Omaha World Herald says industry experts estimate to equal in excess of $1.3 billion.

Nelnet fears the Secretary of Education will back the IG, viewing its case differently than New Mexico's. Unlike New Mexico, Nelnet aggressively abused the 9.5% subsidy. Nelnet didn't just refinance its 9.5% loan bonds to extend their life beyond 1993. Through an additional creative financing method, Nelnet also grew its claimed 9.5% loan volume more than nine fold in the four years stretching from 2001 to 2005. In the first four years of the Bush Administration, Nelnet went from claiming over $300 million in 9.5% loans to claiming over $3 billion worth -- all the while successfully billing U.S. taxpayers for an inflated subsidy that Congress thought it got rid of in 1993.

Nelnet is hoping Secretary of Education Margaret Spellings will overrule the IG once again, as she did for New Mexico. Will she? Will the IG's report be buried until after the fall election? Will someone else in the Administration take notice of the more than $1.2 billion at stake?

Sign Up For Higher Ed Watch E-mails | Return to Main Blog Page

Comments

Nelnet Press Release

See below Nelnet’s press release on the coming Inspector General report:

“LINCOLN, Neb., Aug 10, 2006 /PRNewswire-FirstCall-- Nelnet (NYSE: NNI) announced today it received a draft audit report from the Office of Inspector General of the Department of Education (OIG) related to the OIG audit of Nelnet's portfolio of student loans receiving 9.5% special allowance payments.

The draft audit report raises issues of a technical nature concerning the company's qualification for the special allowance payments and recommends Nelnet be required to return what the OIG contends to be overpayments in connection with certain loans receiving a 9.5% special allowance payment and exclude such loans from future requests for such payment.

Nelnet disagrees with the OIG's draft findings and recommendations.”

-- Maybe Sallie Mae has a different view ...

I agree with the IG

I agree with the IG completely.

So Congress made a mistake...

So Congress made a mistake and corporate America is not only being expected to pay for it (as usual), but also taking the blame??? Congress failed the taxpayers by ineffectively processing the bill. Is the OIG introducing a new value proposition into free enterprise where opportunism becomes illegitimate? And let's not forget - Nelnet did not hide this practice, making the whole "watch dog - sniffing it out" concept preposterous. It was right under the government's nose – as was the opportunity to correct the matter before the congressional error became a significant taxpayer liability. It appears to me that Nelnet has bright and creative business managers and financial analysts who openly capitalized on a tax loophole. Perhaps we should look to these folks to help our congressional committees become more effective at what they do.

Nelnet

Since the Republicans got power, the government is indistinguishable from the private sector. If you think that Nelnet has bright and creative people, then you are either ignorant or just as big a crook as they are. Rich people stealing from government programs is not creative or bright. It doesn't take creativity or brightness, just corrupt connections, the money to pay lawyers, and a lack of morality.

Great website! Bookmarked! I am impressed at your work!

Great website! Bookmarked! I am impressed at your work!

Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.