• The Biden administration has abolished the federal student-loan program

    From Biased Journalism@21:1/5 to All on Sat Dec 9 10:25:30 2023
    XPost: or.politics, ca.politics, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh
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    The Biden administration has abolished the federal student-loan program,
    at least if a "student-loan program" is one in which students borrow money
    and then eventually repay it. What's being erected in its stead is a
    scheme that's rife with moral hazard, seemingly designed to inflate
    college costs, and best described as a "student-fraud program"-in which students borrow money, promise to repay it, and then … don't.

    Biden's loan-forgiveness shenanigans leapt into public consciousness when
    he tried to farcically read the 2003 HEROES Act to allow him to shovel
    $500 billion in loan "forgiveness" to his highly educated base and stick taxpayers with the tab. When that bit of unconstitutional maneuvering was struck down by the Supreme Court this summer, many observers moved
    on-imagining that the issue was resolved.

    You know who didn't move on? The Biden administration, which has simply
    shifted strategy and is continuing with a multi-dimensional effort to warp
    or break federal rules to give borrowers as much free money as it can. The pattern was clear in Biden's push to extend the Trump administration's "temporary" 2020 pandemic freeze into fall 2023, long after Biden had
    declared the pandemic over, halting both payments and interest accrual-and crediting borrowers for three-plus years of payments they never made. The
    total cost of the pandemic "pause" on repayments? A cool $238 billion.

    Last year, the Biden administration issued new guidelines making it easier
    to discharge student loans in bankruptcy. The restrictions have
    historically been exceedingly stringent, given that college graduates anticipate above-average future earnings but have few or no assets
    currently. That's why banks are reticent to lend them money. The model collapses if borrowers can game the system by declaring bankruptcy,
    shrugging off their debt, and then proceeding on their merry way. Quite evidently, the Biden team is not troubled by any of this.

    Earlier this year, the administration finalized changes to income-driven repayment (IDR), gifting billions in taxpayer funds to borrowers. By
    having repayment reflect income, IDR was designed to protect both
    borrowers and taxpayers. But Biden's new rules further sweetened the Obama administration's already generous terms. Undergraduate borrowers will pay
    just five percent of their income above 225 percent of the federal poverty level (down from 10 percent above 150 percent) and will have all loan
    balances forgiven after as little as 10 years. Urban Institute scholars
    Jason Delisle and Jason Cohn calculate that less than one-third of undergraduate borrowers in programs like psychology, teacher education,
    and the liberal arts will repay their loans and that only 35 percent of borrowers in public associate's degree programs will repay theirs.

    In October, the U.S. Department of Education (ED) released the draft of
    its latest loan-forgiveness plan, and this week it released some
    additional clarification. While nominally more limited than the plan the Supreme Court shot down in June, this one would "forgive" huge swaths of
    debt for those with balances that exceed what they originally borrowed,
    who've had loans for more than 25 years, who enrolled in career-training
    that created "unreasonable" loan balances or provided insufficient
    earnings, who attended an institution with "unacceptably high" loan
    default rates, or whom the Secretary of Education deems eligible for forgiveness programs. The odd thing about all these provisions is that
    there already exist repayment options for borrowers who demonstrate an inability to pay. That makes it unclear why the Biden team thinks it so
    vital that borrowers who can repay their loans (but who don't like having
    to do so) should be able to stick taxpayers with the tab, torching the assumption on which student lending rests-that borrowers have an
    obligation to honor their debts.

    ED has also signaled it may seek to cancel repayment for anyone
    "experiencing hardship that is not otherwise addressed by the existing
    student loan system." What constitutes "hardship," exactly? Well, ED
    mentions having received a Pell Grant (as if a taxpayer grant represents
    an excuse not to repay a taxpayer loan) or dropping out of college. As economist Preston Cooper has noted, "Given that 38 percent of students do
    not finish college and 54 percent of those that finish received Pell
    Grants," these two conditions alone would qualify 71 percent of former
    college students for forgiveness. While the costs of all this are not yet clear, the cost of this "narrower" cancellation could wind up rivaling
    Biden's failed $500 billion scheme.

    In pursuing its new forgiveness scheme, the Biden team has turned to "negotiated rulemaking": This is one of those Beltway rituals in which
    agency officials modify laws without the hassle of having to pass
    legislation. Traditionally, this involves convening a broad cross-section
    of representatives to hash out a workable compromise. Because the Biden
    team is seeking to turn a modest bit of rarely used flexibility into a
    recipe for giving away hundreds of billions of dollars, that kind of
    process wouldn't suffice. The Biden team has instead stacked the 14-member panel with friends of the cause while, as AEI's Michael Brickman has
    observed, "entirely exclud[ing] groups that are significantly affected,
    such as those representing taxpayers." Of course, such conduct is hardly shocking from an administration that brags about giving away more than
    $127 billion in taxpayer funds to more than 3.5 million borrowers and that blithely ignored the admonition of former House speaker Nancy Pelosi that
    Biden lacked the authority to forgive student loans.

    The Biden team has been so eager to free borrowers from their obligations
    that the Government Accountability Office (GAO) found the Department of Education grossly negligent in its rush to push forward with its unconstitutional HEROES scheme. Indeed, the GAO reports that Biden's
    officials didn't seem to seek to prevent "ineligible borrowers from
    receiving relief." Two million borrowers were automatically approved for forgiveness based solely on their self-reported income, without an
    application or any verification of earnings and despite GAO's having
    previously found that such processes are rife with fraud. For an
    administration that watched hundreds of billions in pandemic emergency aid
    and unemployment insurance be stolen by bad actors, this kind of
    negligence borders on criminality.

    Addressing What Biden Has Done

    At this point, those concerned about fairness, personal responsibility, perverse incentives, or the exploding federal debt have been left with
    only one choice: to acknowledge in statute what the Biden team has done in practice and pull the plug on the federal student-lending program. We no
    longer have a federal lending program. Instead, we have a massive
    government subsidy to the affluent, the nation's college-goers, and the higher-education cartel.

    The champions of loan forgiveness are remarkably forthright and
    unapologetic about all this. The Debt Collective, a prominent student-debt activist group, recently circulated a widely viewed petition in which signatories pledged: "I refuse to pay a debt the President promised to
    cancel." This is not borrowing. This is government-aided theft. But such
    views have been normalized: A poll conducted for Newsweek this fall found
    that 58 percent of voters who hold student debt said they would
    potentially or absolutely "consider refusing to repay it." The Biden administration has fostered a mind set in which borrowers increasingly get
    the sense that they should not expect to have to repay their loans.

    While UPenn's Wharton School calculates that Biden's IDR modifications
    alone will cost taxpayers $475 billion over the next decade, such
    estimates can't account for how these incentives and changes in culture
    will change behavior. That's why cost estimates for changes to repayment programs have consistently underestimated the cost to taxpayers. As my AEI colleague Nat Malkus has calculated, Congress expected IDR (and Public
    Service Loan Forgiveness) to cost about $8 billion over a 10-year period.
    With Biden's changes, IDR could cost 45 times that much.

    Until 2010, the federal student-lending program mostly worked by
    guaranteeing that banks that made loans to students would be repaid with federal funds, so long as they followed the rules and made a good-faith
    effort to collect what was owed. Champions of "direct lending" argued that taxpayers and students alike would benefit if this were all replaced by
    cutting out the banks and issuing lower-cost loans directly to students.
    When federal direct lending replaced the federally guaranteed loan
    program, some of us feared that Congress might be tempted to keep
    sweetening the terms for borrowers. But I don't know of anyone who
    anticipated a giveaway as unilateral or grandiose as what Biden's
    proposed.

    The Biden administration is rewarding irresponsible behavior by students
    and colleges. It gets forgotten, for instance, that student loans are
    routinely used to pay for living expenses. Biden's proposed forgiveness
    policy would mean that students who borrow money can enroll, screw around
    for a few years, drop out, and then get those loans canceled … because
    they didn't finish a degree. This encourages students to borrow while
    making a sucker of anyone who gets a job or joins the armed forces, thus forgoing several years of taxpayer-funded partying. That's unlikely to
    have healthy effects on students or American culture.

    And this is a recipe for runaway college price inflation. When students
    expect that they won't have to repay everything they borrow, they've even
    less reason to worry about cost. Colleges, in turn, have every reason to
    tell students, "Don't worry, it's free money." This is a recipe for a
    massive transfer of wealth from a deep-in-the-red U.S. Treasury to some of
    the nation's best-endowed universities.

    What Now?

    If student lending went away, how would students afford college? Well,
    perhaps that's something the Biden team and its progressive cheerleaders should've contemplated earlier. But there are some options.

    There already exist federally supported Pell Grants for low-income college-goers. There are scholarship funds, and colleges with endowments
    can tap their resources to help potential students. There are tuition
    benefits from volunteering for the armed forces. There are also private
    loans that some students can access. And there are promising solutions the Biden gang has worked to quash, like income-share agreements (in which borrowers share future earnings with their lenders) or accreditation
    reform that facilitates the emergence of lower-cost options.

    Of course, none of this would be much help when it comes to the
    eye-popping costs of tony colleges or graduate programs. And that's okay.
    In fact, it just might have some enormously healthy consequences. It would steer more students to more affordable schools. It would press some
    colleges to cut costs and might put other overpriced institutions on the
    ropes. It would force some college officials to demonstrate and ensure the value of their diplomas. It might even lead a few richly endowed
    institutions to start putting more of their own funds into covering
    tuition.

    If it's not currently feasible to shutter federal student lending (and
    it's not), we need safeguards to protect taxpayers and curb bad behavior.
    For starters, Washington should start negotiating permissible tuition and
    fee increases with any institution that accepts students with federally
    held loans, just as Medicare does with hospitals. Those institutions
    should also be required to pay an annual "student-loan repayment
    assessment" (based on their students' total borrowing and repayment
    rates), to help cover the costs of forgiveness. The model should be state unemployment systems, funded by business assessments that are adjusted
    based on their employees' utilization rates. Colleges that enroll students
    with federal student loans should also be required to benchmark their
    benefits and administrative ranks against private-sector best practices,
    with eligibility for participation contingent on acceptable outcomes.

    The Biden administration has, by hook and by crook, sought to turn the student-loan program into an even worse version of "free college." The
    Biden version adds new layers of dysfunction by encouraging cost
    inflation, rewarding irresponsibility, and teaching educated Americans
    that obligations aren't obligatory. If there's a silver lining, it's that Biden's lawless profligacy has made brilliantly clear the need to rethink
    the whole wretched enterprise of student lending.



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