OPINION: How About A Student Loan Bailout?

By David Love June 3, 2009 2:36 pm

<br />

The education bubble is going to burst. It has to happen. On a daily basis, we hear about the bursting of the housing bubble. Housing values were over inflated. Millions of people found themselves with mortgages they could not afford to pay-whether through hard times and job loss, racial profiling and predatory lending by unscrupulous, avaricious banking institutions, or other reasons.

But neither can many Americans pay their college loans. Few people really talk about the unholy alliance made between institutions of higher learning and educational lenders to create a travesty in American education-that hot mess known as the student loan hustle.

Here is yet another reason why American capitalism is the scourge of the global community.

Colleges, grad schools and professional schools have become profit centers, cash cows and vocational processing plants, rather than places to expand one’s mind and understanding of the world.

And each year, the cost of a college education increases far in excess of the rate of inflation, twice the rate of inflation to be exact. Private law school tuition increased nearly three times the rate of consumer prices between 1990 and 2003. In this time of economic gloom, parents-financially straightjacketed, perhaps unemployed or underemployed, no savings, or their investment portfolios eviscerated- cannot afford to send their children to school.

According to the College Board, the average cost of four years at a private college is $136,000, $57,000 at a public university. Meanwhile, the student loan industry makes $85 billion a year. Federal loans are at $544 billion, up $42 billion from 2008. And students borrowed a record $17.3 billion in private student loans in 2005-6, a 913% increase from a decade earlier. In 2008, according to FinAid.org, there was nearly $131 billion in outstanding private student loans. These private loans, the fastest segment of the student loan market, often have exorbitant and variable interest rates, highly punitive late fees and charges, and are based on the borrower’s credit rating rather than his or her need. Thanks to the power of the student loan industry- and hack politicians who believe we must leave no corporation behind-these loans, unlike mortgage foreclosures, are not covered by bankruptcy protection.

And then there are those unscrupulous and unduly influenced university officials who accept kickbacks, gifts, trips, revenue sharing agreements and other goodies from the lenders (who are eager to earn even more profits on the backs of students), in exchange for access to students. Andrew Cuomo, New York State attorney general, uncovered much of this scandal in a 2007 investigation. For example, the financial aid director at the University of Southern California owned 1,500 shares of Education Lending Group, parent company of the university’s preferred lender, Student Loan Xpress. In addition, the financial aid directors at Columbia University and University of Texas owned stock in that company, with the former selling his shares at a $100,000 profit. All three officers were terminated by their respective universities. The director of student financial services at Johns Hopkins University resigned after Cuomo’s probe revealed that she had received $65,000 from Student Loan Xpress, giving the impression that she was an employee of the lending company rather than of the university. And Matteo Montana, a Bush Department of Education official, held at least 10,500 shares (at least $100,000) of the company’s stock, and he was supposed to be overseeing that lender, as well as others who participated in the Federal Family Education Loan Program (FFELP).

When greed rules the student loan process-not unlike financial deregulation and the Wall Street meltdown, the Madoff scandal, and the subprime mortgage mess- no one is looking out for the interests of ordinary students. The result is that students get shafted, and the banks and their enablers get rich. People of meager or modest means, just hoping for education as a way up and a way out, are crushed under the weight of loans they cannot afford to pay when they graduate. They emerge no better, or even worse off, than the previous generation, with six-figure, mortgage-sized indebtedness, and monthly payments that exceed all other expenses, if not their entire paycheck. Some young people must forego homeownership because they cannot afford a mortgage, or must live with their parents until things get better, if they ever get better.

CLICK HERE TO READ MORE.

BlackCommentator.com Editorial Board member David A. Love, JD is a journalist and human rights advocate based in Philadelphia, and a contributor to the Progressive Media Project and McClatchy-Tribune News Service, among others. He contributed to the book, States of Confinement: Policing, Detention, and Prisons (St. Martin’s Press, 2000). Love is a former Amnesty International UK spokesperson. His blog is davidalove.com.

Share with friends!
  • BlackPlanet
  • TwitThis
  • Facebook
  • E-mail this story to a friend!

Comments

16

% %

You must be logged in to post a comment.
  • 6-7-2009 12:19 am

    LOL.. a student bailout.. hmph… I could only wish something this miraculous would happen. My tuition was lost, adn my school is threating to send it to collections.. Ive lost my job and now I had to put my business degree on hold and incure more debt by changing majors into a field that have a better likely hood of hiring. Pftt… Medical assisting school will cost me 16,000 for 8 months, but I had to take out at least a 20,000 loan just to cover expenses.. Im already poor.. I just hope PELL gives me a refund so I can play catch up…

  • 6-4-2009 11:49 am

    For years I have often day dreamed about something like this. I had a 5,500 student loan in 91 when I was a teenager. In a worthless ass computer repair school in Boston. A big waste of time and money. I just paid 6400 on it last year and still owe over 8K. That is the only reason I have not finished school and I am just a few points short of MENSA. I have over two years credits but am paying it out of pocket. Not whining Im just saying I have already given these people Citicorp-ASA over 12K. For a BS school. Not even a degree school.

  • 6-4-2009 11:37 am

    Oh I culd go on forever about student loans. many get loans because it is the only way to pay for college, and you believ that the education will pay off and you will get a job with a high enough salary to pay back the loans. Unfortunately most entry level positions are not enought to pay living and the high inflated monthly payment of student loans.

  • 6-4-2009 9:59 am

    I just learned that my college Coppin State University has one of the lowest graduation rates of all the colleges in the country. I did,t graduate for several reasons but am not surprised at this stat. I dont equate a degree with success however I do need to complete this for my own personal enrichment. I cant afford to acc**ulate anymore debt in student loans and my employer wont reimburse me for completing my coursework so i need to figure out how to graduate w/o the additional debt.

  • 6-3-2009 11:51 pm

    Yeah…things are out of control. If you can’t find a job how are you going to keep up with all the increases in goods and services? Everyone has to eat for goodness sakes. Companies and the government can care less because they are eating every second. It’s bulls**t man!

    -N.S. Ugezene, author of Shaun Pascal-

  • 6-3-2009 11:50 pm

    Some type of bailout would be nice. I’ve had this in mind since all of the bailouts started.

  • 6-3-2009 10:12 pm

    A student loan bailout would be Wonderful!!! Hell after you finish school you supposed to figure out how to use your degree to make money in order to better your self, not bust your butt to try to pay back for a better life and career!

  • 6-3-2009 9:21 pm

    The bailout shouldve been for the people not the corporations…They get it and go on lavish trips in luxurious jets while the people still complain about petro bein high…F*# a bailout…We needa couple of John Dillingers and Robin Hoods!

  • 6-3-2009 9:12 pm

    Now that would be some bailout for ya’! I know people who are disabled and can’t pay back their student loans. Their stimulus money, even the $250.00 for disabled people was taken and sent to pay on their student loans. What’s the point of it if the people can’t get it?

  • 6-3-2009 9:02 pm

    YAAAAAAAAAAAHHHHHHHHHHH

  • 6-3-2009 8:55 pm

    How about the government bailing out the whole country? HA! That wont happen, and if it did, slavery will be back in action…..

  • 6-3-2009 8:04 pm

    I would love a student loan bailout. makin the payments every month is a chore. Maybe it would work if this gets out in the public eye.

  • 6-3-2009 7:29 pm

    SMH..now im going tranferring from a community college to a 4 yr university, and with financial aid && a student loan, i still dont have enough money for school..so how can we pay back what they wont let us borrow?

  • 6-3-2009 7:13 pm

    That is such a great idea!! I second and third that motion!

  • 6-3-2009 7:05 pm

    it sounds too good to be true, but it just might work, lol. Considering for me, thats 250.00 I could put towards food or home ownership, why wasnt this proposed. Who cares if GM stays its going to go one way or the other, eventually, but change that starts now is more effective for Americans struggling NOW! I think we should start a petition or a drive to push this. What would the plan look like? Of course, these companies are gonna want something in return or the government might. What would that be? I think no interest student loans and student loan interest waivers should be an idea of the past, present, and future.LETS PUSH

  • 6-3-2009 5:57 pm

    I think that would be a great idea, since i have student loans. that would be just beautiful, I could pay them off and finish school without having to scramble and save to make payments.

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT