Rising student loan debt a ‘crisis,’ DeVos says,
By Eric
Stirgus, 11/27/18, AJC.
Since 2007, the amount
of student loan debt held by the federal government has
tripled, from about $500 billion to an estimated $1.5 trillion, according to
the federal government’s top education official.
U.S. Education Secretary
Betsy DeVos warned an audience in Atlanta on Tuesday that this is a national
problem. “We have a crisis in higher education,” DeVos said at the start of a four-day
Federal Student Aid (FSA) training conference, held at the Georgia World
Congress Center. “Our higher ed system is the envy of the world, but if we, as
a country, do not make important policy changes in the way we distribute,
administer and manage federal student loans, the program
on which so many
students rely will be in serious jeopardy.”
DeVos also told the
audience that 43 percent of student loans are considered in “distress,” meaning
they’re delinquent, at risk of default or students aren’t paying enough on
their loans.
In Georgia, like much of
the nation, students are borrowing more to attend school. In 2010-11, students
who graduated from some of Georgia’s top public colleges, such as the
University of Georgia or Georgia Tech, borrowed an average of $16,705,
according to a recent Southern Regional Education Board report. In 2015-16, the
average amount borrowed was $21,907, the report found, a 31 percent increase.
State funding per
student to public colleges in Georgia and many states has also declined since
the last decade, and college costs have increased. The average state funding
per student in the University System of Georgia has declined from $8,191 in
fiscal year 2009 to $7,541 per student this fiscal year, according to state data.
The average price of attendance at a state school swelled from $8,361 a year in
2006 to $14,791 in 2016, a 77 percent increase, a state auditor report found. In response to concerns about rising
costs and debt, the state’s Board of Regents voted earlier this year not to raise
tuition this school year.
DeVos said a national
conversation is needed about college costs. Educators, she said, should talk
more with students about which educational pathways are best and be upfront
with students about their loans, and the federal government must be a more
responsible lender. DeVos said her office is working on efforts to be more
transparent about debt, such as sharing information with students about how
much they owe, likely on a mobile app her office recently created that DeVos promoted in her speech
Tuesday.
She put some blame for
the rising loan costs on the Obama administration, saying it conducted a
“government takeover of student lending” in 2010.
“As you know, in 2010
under the guise of helping expand the Pell grant program and paying for
Obamacare, the previous administration federalized the student loan portfolio,”
DeVos told the audience. “That move was paired with a consistent drumbeat of
not-so-subtle signals that a traditional four-year college degree is the only path to and measure
for success.”
Terry Hartle, who’s been
involved in these issues for more than two decades, said he agreed with DeVos
about her concerns that some colleges don’t clearly inform students about the
loan process. Hartle, senior vice president for the Washington, D.C.-based American
Council on Education, which represents about 1,700 college and university presidents
disagreed that the system is in crisis mode. He noted the default rate is 10.8
percent and that the Obama administration effort in 2010 to be more involved in
borrowing without subsidies to private lenders for federally-backed loans
was saving the government money.
“The fact is for the
vast majority of borrowers … they will pay back their loans with minimal
difficulty,” Hartle said.
The U.S. Department of
Education has been in an ongoing legal battle concerning student loan
forgiveness rules implemented during the Obama administration. A federal judge
recently ruled the department must follow the Obama administration guidelines,
which allow students to have their federal student loans forgiven if a school
employed illegal or deceptive practices to encourage the students to borrow to attend the school. DeVos has proposed a new
formula, calling the Obama-era rules confusing to schools and students and
costly to the department.
Comments
DeVos rightly lays the
blame for the $1.5 Trillion Student Loan balance on Obama, but he was
attempting to crash the US economy to make room for global governance. Most of
this $1.5 trillion can be traced back to excessive interest charged to
students. Sallie Mae needs to be re-privatized with loans based on the
loan-holders’ ability to repay the loan.
Just like giving
mortgage loans to unqualified buyers that caused the 2008 Meltdown, most
student who hold these loans will not be able to repay them. Only those whose
degrees ensure high incomes will be able to repay these loans.
She is not accurate in
describing US Universities as the “envy of the world”. These are toxic bubbles
laced with Marxist propaganda to encourage an “entitlement mentality” in the
students.
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody
GA Tea Party Leader
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