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Scare Tactics

Lenders Urge Union Members to Oppose Legislation that Would Help Students
June 14, 2007

Now that Congress is taking action to make college more affordable for students and their parents, the loan industry is once again doing what it does best: spreading fear to try to protect the overly-generous subsidies that lenders get from the federal government to make student loans.

Courtesy of the American Federation of Teachers (AFT), Higher Ed Watch has learned that the Consumer Bankers Association (CBA) and the loan giant Nelnet have been spreading misinformation to labor union members to get them to join a campaign opposing legislation that the House Committee on Education and Labor approved on Wednesday that would increase spending on need-based student aid and make student loans less costly.

The AFT has released handwritten, personalized notes that the Consumer Bankers group and Nelnet had sent to local AFL-CIO union leaders in Colorado and in Indiana urging them to sign on to letters to Democratic lawmakers encouraging "Congress to continue making higher education accessible and affordable using the widest range of government- and private-sector loan programs and partnerships."  Families have "reason to be concerned now," the notes go on to say, "because Congress is considering limitations on ways families and college students can fund college educations -- even as tuition costs rise faster than family incomes and inflation."

Sounds pretty bad. Luckily, it's not true.

The legislation that the House education committee approved doesn't limit "the ways families and college students can fund college educations." On the contrary, the bill, which was drafted by Rep. George Miller (D-CA), the House education committee's chairman, would expand the government's investment in higher education and make it easier for students and their families to pay for college. For example, the measure would:

  • Raise the maximum Pell Grant by $500 over five years beginning in 2008-9. Combined with the $390 increase that the House is currently considering for the 2008 fiscal year, the maximum award would be $5,200 in 2014, up from $4,310 this year.
  • Slash the interest rate on federally-subsidized student loans in half, to 3.4 percent in 2012-13.
  • Raise the annual loan limits so that juniors and seniors can borrow up to $7,500 a year each, up from $5,500. Raise the aggregate limits to $30,500.
  • Cap the amount of money that borrowers with unmanageable levels of debt would have to repay each month as a percentage of their income, and forgive their remaining debt after 20 years.
  • Increase the amount of money that working students can earn before their aid eligiblity is reduced.
  • Create new scholarships for students who agree to teach in high-poverty areas. and provide loan forgiveness for students who pursue careers in the public service.
  • Provide incentives to colleges to curb the growth in their tuition increases, and disincentives to states to reduce spending on higher education.

The notes that the Consumer Bankers group and Nelnet sent to the unions also provide the misleading impression that the legislation would dismantle the Federal Family Education Loan (FFEL) program or, at the very least, lure colleges to enter the competing federal direct-loan program. "Students and their families need the fullest range of financing choices," the notes say. "This includes all government and private sector organizations with solid records of working with students, their famiies, and departments within colleges and universities."

A letter accompanying the notes goes even further. "Bills recently introduced in Congress may in fact limit both accessibility and affordability by inducing schools to switch from the private-lender based loan program favored by more than 80 percent of the nation's schools to the federal government's student loan program."

Again, not true. None of the Democratic bills introduced so far would kill the FFEL program. And Mr. Miller deliberately left out a provision he has championed in the past that would entice colleges to join direct lending. Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (D-MA) is also not expected to include that provision, known as the STAR Act, in student-loan legislation he is planning on introducing next week. [The editor of Higher Ed Watch used to work for Senator Kennedy].

And while Mr. Miller's bill would reduce lender subsidies to pay for the aid increases, the cuts are only slightly deeper than those proposed by President Bush in February. Financial analysts who study this industry don't believe that lenders will be forced to leave the program. Sameer Gokhale, an analyst with Keefe, Bruyette & Woods. told The Wall Street Journal that while the cuts are "marginally worse" than President Bush's proposal, they were, according to the Journal,  "not nearly as bad as could be and were in line with what market analysts were expecting."

Luckily, union leaders are seeing through these efforts to mislead their members for what they are: cynical ploys to drum up grass-roots opposition to legislation that would cut lender profits. In a letter, Richard L. Trumka, Secretary-Treasurer of the AFL-CIO,  warned his members that the claims that the Consumer Bankers and Nelnet were making were "disingenous."

"Contrary to these assertions, the changes under consideration in Congress would have virtually no impact on loan access or affordability," Mr. Trumka wrote.

"As recent press accounts have shown, the student loan program has been subject to abuses that harm, not help, students and their families," he stated. "The CBA's actions in spreading erroneous information continue that pattern."

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Comments

Do the math

The Miller proposal to 'reduce' interest rates is a pure facade.

 He takes 5 years to get to the magical figure of 3.4%.

 Then it immediately goes back up to 6.8%.

 If you do the math it works out to an average of $10 bucks a week or so in savings for kids that have already graduated.

 How exactly does this increase access? Because some poor kid is seriously sitting at the kitchen table with their mom or dad and saying "Gee, if the interest rate was only 3.4% after I graduate, I'd be able to go to college."

 A better policy, one much more rational, would be to pour all that money into Pell so those kids don't have to borrow in the first place.

 This is pure politics, not an ounce of good policy.

 

College Cost Reduction Act? A lie in sheeps clothing

Can the political rhetoric in this country get any more rediculous? Get your calculators and lets play with numbers. My numbers are average to low in my area, so what we are about to do is conservative estimates at best: This year, tuition and fees run around the $5000 per year range. That's $2500 per semester. If you estimate that tuition and fee increases are averaging 7% each year, this is what higher education will cost over the next 7-8 years. It is important to remember the title of the newest bill is "College Cost Reduction Act". Here we go:

2006-7          $5000

2007-8          $5350

2008-9          $5725

2009-2010    $6125

2010-2011    $6554

2011-2012    $7013

2012-2013    $7504

2013-2014    $8029

2014-2015    $9193

Has any one noticed any cost reduction yet? Here are some more numbers. The Pell Grant for 2006-2007 is $4050. If tuition is at $5000, a student needs to come up with an additional $950 . Somewhat tolerable. Let's all cheer for Congress: in 2014-15 Pell will be raised to $5200! What an accomplishment. During that year a student will only have to come up with (9193-5200= $3993! I feel much better about college costs being reduced! Whew. It's a good thing we have such brilliant people overseeing our educational institutions of higher learning. Whom should we congratulate? Oh yeah, remember that this is all being done to help the poor and middle class (most of whom aren't eligible for a full Pell Grant).

 

College funding bill

It is better than the 100 days bill. Most students don't qualify for the Pell because the FAFSA formula overstates the EFC. Miller's bill can be amended to change the FAFSA formula to also exclude contributions to 401(k)  and 403(b) for parents over 50 to be consistent wiht the SS catch up incentives. Also payments to existing PLUS loans should reduce the available income. Interest rates should not only be reduced for student loans but for PLUS loans for parents. Those in the middle who don't qualify for aid but have no money to send their kids to college.

But the comments are correct we need to support education wiht direct funding not borrow from the parents retirement funds and the students future earnings. We will have a society of debtors without the ability to save. Higher education is a requirement not a luxury.

Home equity

The FAFSA formula should be returned to the pre-1993 days when Home Equity was counted as an asset, just like money in your bank account.  If you didn't want to tap your home equity, then you would need to tighten your belt elsewhere, or else draw down savings much faster than FAFSA required.  Excluding Home Equity from the federal financial aid formula results in a massive distortion of financial incentives where Americans shift their assets to non-economically-productive home investments/improvements, not to mention houses that are larger and larger with each generation.  Larger than otherwise wanted by the consumer, in other words.  We need to encourage Americans to start new businesses, expand existing businesses, and not just park money in their homes.  The FAFSA is of course not the whole reason for our shift to a home-equity-based economy, but it is definitely part of the reason.  The 1992 HEA Amendments provided a sop to the homeowners of America.

College Funding Bill

Miller and his colleagues in the House committee are doing the right thing.  They are finally making some progress to reverse the two-decade trend that has reduced the purchasing power of available student financial aid.  It's good to see that Congress is finally more concerned about students and families than the bankers.

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