Tough Choices Ahead on College Aid Plan
The massive college aid bill that Congress passed earlier this month is headed to the President for signature. As the newest member of the Higher Ed Watch team and a budget hawk, I thought I would point out some of the loose ends that are going to have to be tied up in the near future if the bill is to live up to its dual promise of increasing student financial aid without imposing any new costs on taxpayers.
The first promise: The bill increases student financial aid by more than $20 billion. Indeed it does. Consider the two largest new sources of aid, more Pell Grant money and lower interest rates on some student loans. The bill provides $11.4 billion over five years to support bigger Pell Grants for needy students, and, at a cost of $6.1 billion over the next five years, it gradually lowers for undergraduates the interest rate paid on subsidized Stafford student loans taken out in the coming years from the current fixed 6.8 percent level to 3.4 percent.
The second promise: Increases in student aid will be provided "at no new cost to taxpayers." This is also true. The bill reduces taxpayers subsidies provided to lenders and guarantee agencies making federal student loans and redirects those funds to pay for more student aid. The cuts - $22 billion over the next five years - are more than enough to cover the full cost of the increased student aid, so the bill doesn’t cost taxpayers any new money on a net basis.
Thus, it appears that the bill makes good on its promises. But there are some details in the new college aid bill that could, depending on how Washington addresses them later, make Congress a promise breaker.
It turns out that the new bill's shift of taxpayer money from lender subsidies to increased student financial aid isn't enough to cover the full cost of all of the benefits that Congressional leaders originally wanted to provide, particularly with respect to the planned student loan interest rate cut and Pell Grant boost. Early on, the bill's drafters realized they had two choices: either cut lender subsidies even further to cover the promised levels of student aid or somehow make the cost of the student benefits fit within the money available. They chose the later option, because they were concerned that cutting lenders subsidies further would either make federal student loans unprofitable for private lenders or engender too much political pushback. The graphs below show how the bill makes the additional Pell Grant aid and cost of the interest rate cut fit within the money freed up by the lender subsidy reductions.
Under the new college aid bill, mandatory Pell Grant funding increases each year until it hits $5.1 billion in 2012 and then mandatory spending for Pell students falls off a cliff in 2013 to $105 million. In 2014 it is funded again, but at a lower level than it reached in 2013. A freshman college student in 2012 will have a much lower Pell Grant in her last three years of college, if Congress doesn't later backfill this projected cut. The graph below shows that Congress will need to spend $9 billion more than the bill provides to maintain the Pell Grant funding at the level it is to reach in 2012. Of course, Congress could pass a new bill that provides the additional aid, but it will need to be offset by spending reductions, otherwise the new student aid provided in the reconciliation bill will cost taxpayers new money -- six years from now.
If the additional aid is provided by deficit spending (i.e. no offset or tax increase) I'd consider that a failure to keep the promise of no new cost to taxpayers as well. Higher deficits require more debt and interest payments supported by taxes. Of course the deficit could be lower in six years, but no one is betting on that in Washington right now.
Regardless, the same phenomenon is present with the planned borrower interest rate cut. The interest rate cut from 6.8 percent to 3.4 percent has to be phased in slowly over the coming years, otherwise the costs will be too high to fit within Congress' lender subsidy reduction offset. But absent future Congressional action,loans taken out in 2012 and thereafter will carry interest rates at the present 6.8 percent level. Maintaining the 3.4 percent interest rate on loans taken out after 2011 would cost an additional $17 billion over the 10 year period covered in the college aid reconciliation bill. Again, Congress could enact new legislation that prevents the rate from reverting to 6.8 percent, but unless the full cost of that benefit is offset by other spending reductions, the reconciliation bill will cost taxpayers new money.
In short, the Democratic Congress has taken a page from the Bush 2001 tax cut playbook. (The Bush Administration no doubt followed an earlier precedent doing the same). Just like the Bush tax cuts that expire in 2011, the Democratic Congress boosted student financial aid now and for a not insignificant five year period knowing that when the policy expires in 2013, there will be significant pressure to extend it. How they’ll do it, or even if they'll do it, remains to be seen.
But if Congress wants to keep both of its promises - more student financial aid and no new costs to taxpayers - over the long term, a new group of Members is going to have to find and pass some new offsets. As with the Bush 2001 tax cut, it's not going to be easy.
[Disclosure: The author formerly worked for Senator Judd Gregg (R-NH), who voted against the legislation referenced herein.]
Sign Up For Higher Ed Watch E-mails | Return to Main Blog Page











Past is prologue?
Instead of speculating about things in the future that might never happen, why not research whether any of the GOP offsets in the 1998 reauthorization or the 2005 higher ed reconciliation have generated anywhere near the "savings" they had projected at the time? The ultimate higher ed budget gimmick was moving the date of student loan default 90 days further out, thus giving delinquent borrowers an additional three months to disappear, instead of immediately getting those loans to the collection experts who specialize in defaulted loans (guaranty agencies, etc.). Would anyone you meet on main street actually think that a lender could work some new magic in the next 90 days of delinquency that could not be accomplished in the first 270 days of delinquency? That's nearly a whole year to hang out. We're not talking about someone who misplaced one monthly bill here. What would happen if you were a year delinquent on your car loan or home loan? Yet this budgetary gimmick was counted as a tremendous savings at the time (1998), but is more likely a tremendous cost in the long run. Ultimately, many, if not most, of these loans will be collected, of course. (It is difficult to hide forever from student loan debts.) But the cost to the taxpayer (and borrower) in terms of wasted time, collection fees, capitalized interest, guarantor retention, etc., has been high. (A side benefit, though, was the artificial reduction of so-called "cohort default rates," because their timeframe for counting defaults was never revised, thus leaving only a few months' opportunity for a default to occur.)
"Collection experts?"
"Collection experts?" HAHAHHAHAHAAAHAHAHAHAHA!!! Thanks, Jim. It's not often I get a good laugh from the New America Foundation website. In my own personal experience, most of the "collection experts" I've ever dealt with at either SLM Corporation or their third party beggar/bounty hunter collection agencies are, I'll wager, expert only at buying scratch-off lottery tickets and getting drunk with their fellow biker gang members.
As for those with defaulted or delinquent student loans availing themselves of the opportunity to "disappear?" Um, I've lived at the same address and worked at the same place for years. I have a driver's license, credit cards, and a car registered in my name. I'm registered to vote as well, which might explain why even my local court system has been able to find me and call me for jury duty.
Please go peddle your holier-than-thou, scolding parent, tired, ineffective collection agency routine elsewhere. The fact of the matter is, as with personal bankruptcy, most of the 15% of all student loans that turn delinquent or defaulted are due to a job loss, medical issues, or some other major life event. I wasn't alive in when it was enacted in 1965, but I'm positive that the intent of the Higher Education Act wasn't so that someday SLM Corporation Chairman Albert L. Lord could buy his own $15 million personal luxury golf course or that First Marblehead co-founder Daniel M. Meyers could spend most of his time "losing golf matches and losing boat races" on his racing yacht with a full-time crew of 16.
Insofar as the "tremendous cost" of nonperforming student loans, what about the "million dollars more income over a lifetime" that the student debt industry likes to trot out? A million dollars in additional income over the course of a lifetime in a middle income tax bracket means about $300k in additional taxes paid. Therefore, the average student coming out with $20k in debt and a 4-year degree will have repaid to society his/her student loan debt 15 times over even without ever making a single student loan payment.
To your credit, however, you at least admit that the US Department of Education "Orange Book Cohort" default rate of 5% is completely bogus and grossly understates the real default rate -- which even the Bush White House Budget Office admits is around 12%.
Jason Paskowitz
New Jersey State Coordinator
Student Loan Justice.org
WHAT ABOUT THE COST TO THE BORROWER?
"Savings" - At What Cost?
There is no money left in FFELP. Anytime Congress highjacks the budget process to make changes to the Higher Education Act, these types of issues will arise.
Lenders will be forced to cut back on benefits, some lenders will be forced out of the marketplace altogether, and borrowers will not be able to reap the benefits of lender competition.
Congress has pushed through another anti-business bill, and they have done so in a way that will harm American students and their families and, ultimately, be paid for by American taxpayers.
It's like Congress is trying to score points with the electorate while hoping that no one will stop to look at the ACTUAL consequences of the bill.
The Democrats Threw FFELP Lenders Under the Bus
Citizen Cuomo set the stage by making lenders collectively look like the second coming of Atilla the Hun. That was all that was needed to serve-up the FFELP business. Nobody here will shead any tears for the 250 Nelnet employees who are going to loose their jobs, or the countless other employees of FFELP consolidators who gave Sallie a run for her money who are also now going to loose their jobs come October. Those profits aren't quite as excessive as Citizen C. and Congress made them out to be. A small price to pay for the Democrats reconnecting to the middle class. Too bad those cuts in interest rates are fleeting. Kinda seems like a bait and switch ploy doesn't it (where's Citizen C. when you need him)? Why fix something today when you can push the fiscal disaster into the future (social security is instructive here). Today, elections must be won!
Borrower choices?
Jason, the 1998 "offsets," such as moving the date of default and tightening up bankruptcy dischargeability, were used to pay for the increase in lender and guarantor subsidies and to prevent a significant increase in borrower interest rates. Similarly, the 2005 "cuts" that many lobbyists tried to use to prevent the 2007 reconciliation from passing were (as subsequent loan volumes have bourne out) somewhat of a smoke screen to further hamstring direct lending. Rita, what borrower choice are you talking about? At many, if not most, schools, students and parents simply "choose" the school's preferred lender. And "borrower choice" was never a goal of the HEA. There is no constitutional right to "shop around" for a lender. This is a federal program; uniform terms and conditions create transparency to help already-confused students and parents find their way toward a college degree. We don't have "Bob's social security program" and "Joe's food stamp program," do we? Strange that lenders and guarantors argued until 1999 that they should all just charge the statutory maximum interest rate and the statutory maximum loan fees. At a certain point, though, subsidies got high enough and/or direct lending got competitive enough where they decided to "compete" on price after thirty years. With direct lending fading away, you will see the competition again fade into history.
Post new comment