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Surviving the Game of Chicken

November 23, 2009

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WASHINGTON -- Financial aid officers and their bosses, college presidents, can be forgiven if they feel a little bit like the rope in a game of political tug of war over federal student loans.

On the one hand, they're hearing regularly from the Obama administration and its allies in Congress that they're putting their students' academic futures at risk if they don't prepare to switch to the federal Direct Loan Program now, because pending legislation known as the Student Aid and Fiscal Responsibility Act will require them to do so by next July.

On the other, lenders are whispering in their ears that the legislation's fate is uncertain and that if they prefer the bank-based Federal Family Education Loan Program, in which a majority of colleges still participate, they should stick to their guns. And Republican supporters of the FFEL program introduced legislation last week that would extend the 2008 law, known as the Ensuring Continued Access to Student Loans Act (ECASLA), that provided federal money to buttress the lender-based program as the financial markets collapsed around it.

The problem is that both sets of messengers have political motives in sending those signals, and while many financial aid officers have long held their own opinions about which of the two loan programs they prefer, most of them are setting those aside at the moment.

They're focused instead on the nuts-and-bolts questions they face: If we don't switch to direct lending now, will we truly be putting our students at risk? Can we take partial steps without making the significant investment of time, energy and possibly money that a full-blown shift might require? How long can we wait? How much of a gamble is it not to switch to direct lending now?

From a practical standpoint, putting the political rhetoric aside: What's an aid administrator or college president to do?

Given the self-interested messages coming out of the capital and from loan company officers, the confusion is understandable. For months, the Obama administration and Democratic leaders in Congress have been aggressively advocating for President Obama's proposal to stop making loans through the lender-based FFEL program and to shift all lending to the government's Direct Loan Program.

An air of inevitability has surrounded the Obama plan, in large part because the administration has built backing for the move by proposing to use tens of billions of dollars from the shift to support a range of highly popular purposes: increasing the maximum Pell Grant, buttressing community colleges, investing in early childhood education. The House of Representatives passed legislation in September to carry out the Obama plan, and administration officials and Democratic leaders in the Senate have continually expressed confidence that the Senate will do the same.

But the question of when has begun to be a factor, with health care completely dominating the Congressional agenda, and likely to do so until that legislation is resolved.

As administration officials and, last week, Congressional Democrats sent letters to college presidents essentially telling them that they’d be irresponsible not to get their institutions at least ready to switch to direct lending, many financial aid officers have increasingly bristled about being told to significantly alter their operations in response to a set of requirements in a law that might, eventually, pass Congress.

Some of that unhappiness is no doubt philosophical; many financial aid administrators have been in the lender-based program for decades, have no desire to switch, and believe that the Obama administration is pushing the elimination of the FFEL program mostly because it dislikes the lending industry.

Others continue to believe that competition between two programs is good and worry about the fragility of a system in which all student loans are made through one government-run program, and what might happen if technological or other problems arise.

But at this point, the “political venom” that has marked the debate over student loans has largely faded among financial aid directors themselves, says Justin Draeger, vice president of public policy and advocacy at the National Association of Student Financial Aid Administrators.

In its place -- particularly at colleges that are leery of the switch because they have home-grown technology systems that may require major overhauls or because they have few employees -- is concern about what it means to be “direct loan ready” and how many steps in that direction they can take, or put off until there is no alternative, without putting their students’ loans at risk.

“I’ve got a big folder on my desk that says ‘DL transition,’ but for most of us with small staffs -- we’ve got three people -- there’s no good time in the short term to make a move like this,” says Dave Cecil, director of financial aid at Kentucky’s Transylvania University. “We’re going to have to get help from IT and other people on our campus, and a lot of schools like us don’t want to go down that road until we absolutely have to.”

Reading the tea leaves from Washington is a challenge for aid administrators like Cecil. The letters sent by the Obama administration and Congressional Democrats talk about getting “direct loan ready,” and when Education Department officials used that term at last summer’s NASFAA meeting, they referred to taking a small number of administrative steps needed to have the authority and ability to disburse direct loans.

Those steps -- altering legal agreements with the department, getting passwords to use its disbursement system -- were described as a three- or four-day process equivalent to “flipping a switch.”

But when House Democrats wrote last week that institutions should be sure that they are “prepared to … deploy the Direct Loan program for the 2010-2011 academic year,” that arguably means something quite different.

Eileen O’Leary, financial aid director at Stonehill College and a leader in the Direct Loan Coalition, acknowledges that it is a “bigger deal” to “get your campus ready to process student loans through the department’s origination system” for direct lending. At some campuses, it will mean putting in place just a new module of a proprietary system like Banner; at institutions with legacy or home-grown technologies, it could require a much more extensive overhaul that could be months in the making.

Either way, “there’s going to be a learning curve,” with meaningful “time and energy you have to expend,” O’Leary says.

A survey completed by NASFAA this summer found that most colleges that had already made the transition to direct lending had done so within four months, and that most found it to be easier, and ultimately less burdensome, than they had expected.

Colleges are understandably reluctant to expend the significant time, energy and money required to get “ready” to shift to direct lending without making the full switch, Draeger says. But while it’s unsurprising that direct loan advocates like O’Leary believe the “smart thing to do” now is to “just move to direct lending,” a consensus is growing even among more agnostic parties that the “smart bet” for institutions is to get fully ready for direct lending.

NASFAA has urged its members in writing to “prepare today -- even if it may not ultimately be needed -- to make loans through the Direct Loan program.” And Mark Kantrowitz, publisher of Finaid.org, similarly wrote to financial aid officers Friday that “[i]t would be a wise precaution for all colleges to prepare now for the possible need to originate loans in the Direct Loan program.”

Why does a growing chorus of financial aid experts – even though who don’t necessarily endorse the administration’s plan to end lender-based student loans -- seem to see increased likelihood that 100 percent direct lending is in the offing?

Kantrowitz describes it this way. Congress made clear when it passed the 2008 ECASLA law that it was a temporary stopgap measure to buttress the lender-based FFEL program, and lawmakers have made clear that they have no intention of extending the stopgap law beyond September. Because the financial markets have not recovered meaningfully, Kantrowitz says, “there will be insufficient lending capacity without ECASLA to sustain [FFEL] as a viable source of funding.”

So even if advocates for the lender-based program are right and Congress does not pass the Democrat-sponsored student loan legislation in the coming months, the lender-based program will not be a viable option for colleges and students only if Congress does act to extend ECASLA. “The status quo, if Congress does nothing, is that the direct loan program is going to be dominant loan program,” Kantrowitz says. In other words, the FFEL program exists only because of ECASLA, and there will be virtually no lender-based program if ECASLA is not extended.

Like many financial aid directors, Transylvania’s Cecil says he has a hard time envisioning the Education Department and its Democratic allies in Congress, if they fail to pass the student loan changes they favor, refusing to extend ECASLA and appearing to put the colleges that have remained in FFEL, and their students, at risk. “Does Congress want to be made the bad person?” he asks.

NASFAA has repeatedly encouraged Congress to extend ECASLA to give institutions that cannot make the transition to direct lending by July 1 time to do so. But with lawmakers apparently unwilling to sustain what was always intended to be a temporary fix, says Draeger, the reality is that those who continue to favor the lender-based loan program are increasingly up against not just a powerful set of political forces, but the reality of the economic situation.

“I totally understand why schools don't want to feel pressured to do something that hasn't legislatively passed yet,” he says. “But you also have to look at the market forces. We’ve had a government prop-up [for the FFEL program], and that prop-up may not exist” after next summer. “At a certain point, it stops being a policy position, and starts being practical.”

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Comments on Surviving the Game of Chicken

  • Posted by sk on November 23, 2009 at 8:45am EST
  • FFELP incentives include state guarantor agencies, which reap benefits from the current set up, even when loans default.
    This raises the question, where are states lobbying for lender's legislation, and against their own students, and why isn't this more visible?

  • We'll be ready, but...
  • Posted by Making me tired on November 23, 2009 at 10:45am EST
  • ...if it's not the law, and no one can say with any certainty when it will BE the law, must we devote the time and energy it takes to get ready? Remember Y2K? Get your bottled water and canned tuna stockpiled because it's all gonna hit the fan on 1/1/2000? Great predictions we got then to get ready, didn't we?

    Seriously, look at the administrative fiasco that accompanied expanded GI Bill benefits this fall. People of good conscience can reasonably ask, "And Uncle Sam can handle all the student loan volume?" It's not an unfair question, and the only answer has been "Trust us."

    Best line I've heard: "100% Direct Lending will be the result of implementation by intimidation."

  • Driving Motivation
  • Posted by Alex Hamilton on November 23, 2009 at 11:30am EST
  • A fine article with one major oversight: one of the motivations behind the Department's and Congress's pressuring schools to convert.

    In the world of government programs what's the big deal with a 6-month or 12-month delay in implementation? Happens all the time. In health care reform Harry Reid pushed back the effective date for subsidies for low-income families by six months to save money.

    Here however a delay would force CBO to rescore HR 3221 and that would reveal that much of the projected costs savings has vanished. Since so many schools have already switched to direct loans, billions of dollars of savings have already disappeared.

    The other motivation--get as many schools to convert as possible, even if by hook or crook. This is cynicism at its finest (or lowest).

  • Also,
  • Posted by Chris , Person at Lender on November 23, 2009 at 2:45pm EST
  • I keep hearing that the Gov't is proping up the lenders with ECASLA, and without their help all the lenders would be out. True, to a certain point. But what they (our government) do not say is that it was the gov'ment's /SEC/Federal Reserve/etc oversight (or lack thereof) that allowed our economy to tank, destroyiing the very financial vehicles that kept the student loan industry going smoothly for the last 30 years.

    Their ineptitude caused this student loan disaster. They should help, to right the ship, before forcing all the schools to make these changes.

    I understand the changes the gov is trying to make but the way they have gone about it is completely wrong. Instead of raising Pell, how about making more people eligible??? I bet their are a lot of "working poor" people (middle class) that would love a $2000 Pell. So, basically, make the middle class poor and hope the poor becaome the "working poor" i.e middle class?? The middle class needs help!!!!!!!! The system is made for the really poor and the really rich. Again, the middle class loses.

    These changes will not make higher education less expensive in any way.

    Chris

  • lenders and their lackeys
  • Posted by DS on November 23, 2009 at 3:45pm EST
  • Previous commenters seem to be re-energized by the fact that the Senate is too wrapped up in the health care issue to spend any time on student loans. But folks, don't get your false hopes up. FFELP is the wasteful and corrupt result of a program designed to assist students that over the years made those same students take a back seat to corporate interests. It became one of America's most blatant corporate welfare programs, bailing out filthy rich executives with taxpayer money long before their brethren at AIG or Goldman Sachs got theirs.

    I will continue to dismiss all "sky is falling" lender-led rhetoric about how the big bad Federal government can't run a loan program the day I see private industry come help fund and run the Pell Grant program. The Feds can run that on their own without providing handouts to Congressional contributors, they can handle the loan volume too.

  • DS
  • Posted by Chris , Person at mine on November 23, 2009 at 5:15pm EST
  • DS, I am for change and I am for health care reform. But I am also knowledgable enough to know when change will not work. The reason for this change is to make higher education less expensive. This change will not do that. And on no post has anyone ever told me how this change to DL will make higher education less expensive.

    You could say that the money, and the little it is, that was going to lenders in subsidies, were, in reality, subsidies for repayment options to the middle class or those that took out loans. You used to be able to save 3% or eevn 4% off of your interest rates, saving the bwr thousands of dollars. Now, you have a .25% percent reduction. Thus, making college more expensive to those that take out loans.

    I'm glad the needy students are getting more but at what costs? Do you think it is fair that the gov'ment borrowers money at half a percent, charges the student six percent, and the savings, er, profit is used to pay for someone elses Pell? So a kid that had to take out loans to go to school has to subsidize yet someone poorer than they? Astonishing.

    Mark my words. In two years, the people that were supporting this will say, "Wait a minute. I thought this was supposed to make school more affordable".

    I don't mind a subsidy to the middle class. Take it from the losers that send their money over seas to avoid taxation!

     

    Cp

  • Delays will increase level of savings from switch
  • Posted by Craigie on November 24, 2009 at 5:30am EST
  • The savings of DL over FFEL grows as the interest rate environment rises. Right now we are in an extremely-low interest rate environment. While significant public and private resources are currently working to keep interest rates low, a return to normalcy is inevitable, i.e., T-bill and commercial paper back to 5% (from their current, virtually 0% levels).

  • Posted by MC on November 24, 2009 at 6:30am EST
  • When are parents and students going to get screaming mad about what's going on here? I'm all for taking away the subsidies to loan sharks like Sallie Mae, but why is that money now earmarked for Pell Grants? The money that is currently going to lender subsidies should be returned to the students in the form of much much much lower interest rates. Everyone who has to borrow money to go to college should be able to get student loans with a 1% interest rate max.

  • Craigie
  • Posted by Chris , Person at mine on November 24, 2009 at 10:00am EST
  • Craigie, unfortunately you are very wrong. When interest rates start to go up they will also go up for the Fed - where the gov borrowers the money. Meaning they will no longer be able to borrower at these ultra low levels, and the more interest rates go up the less money the gov will make! These are fixed interest rates the students are paying!!!

    The gov cant say, "well, now we are borrowing at 3% instead of .5% so let's raise the interest rates on the students to make up the difference." The gov will just have to eat that money. They will not be able to save/er earn enough profits to pay for what they have said.

    I voted for this group of people in office, lord knows the other group wasn't any better. And although I think they are going about this student loan deal all wrong, the other side absolutley ruined our country. It's like someone handing you GM and saying, "Turn it around in 9 months or we are firing you". Or hiring a new coach of the Clevland browns and saying, " you have one year". The Repubs dug such a large hole it will take years to get out of. Not nine months.

    Proud to be an American, Ashamed of my gov.

     

    Chris

  • Direct loan program - a fait accompli
  • Posted by feudi pandola , FAO on November 24, 2009 at 11:00am EST
  • Good article. At this point it is irresponsible for any school not to have signed up for the Direct Loan program. We did so last year, and training starts next month. We're dealing with people's future so to do nothing and hope for the continuance of FFELP is very shortsighted. We are a small school - one person in financial aid. I attended the Department of ED webinars and I sure hope large schools have the capacity to manage this change, because, trust me, the federal Direct Loan system is needlessly complex, non-user friendly, and very labor intensive. Period. We are, after all, dealing with a federal bureaucracy. My guess is that, in the end, taxpayers will spend far, far more on adminstrative costs of Direct Loan than students will ever realize in increased Pell grants. Further, I expect that defaults on these loans will skyrocket over the next 5 or 10 years. One of the criticisms of Direct Loans is that there is very little oversight once the cash is out the door. Not that this is any great surprise...

    Why in the world would we ever surrender the educational future of our children to the same bozos, yoyos and jackals who brought us Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, AIG, and bailouts? Going to hell in a handbasket, I believe, is the term

     

     

  • Interest rates and net present value
  • Posted by Craigie on November 26, 2009 at 4:00pm EST
  • What 'Fed'? The Federal Reserve is not involved. Capital for direct loan programs is handled the same whether it is USDA, VA, HUD, Education, or any other agency. It is the zero coupon bond approach. Arguably, Education should have actually gotten a much better deal than the other agencies in 1990 because their borrowers are much lower risk. For other agencies and programs, generally all interested borrowers first must try to borrow through a guaranteed loan program. In those agencies, generally only the highest-risk borrowers -- the ones that all lenders have first rejected -- are compelled to borrow through a direct loan program; everything is based on credit, and guaranteed lenders won't take them. With federal student loans it is different; the school, not the borrower, determines the program used, and, as others have pointed out, direct student loan has historically had the lower-risk schools, resulting in lower cohort default rates.

    Loan holders are paid by Uncle Sam on a variable-interest-rate basis. These costs are minimal now but will balloon (despite the subsidy cuts in 2007) once interest rates return to a normal level. It is true that the advantage of DL over FFEL would be even higher if borrower interest rates were variable as well. That's one reason the Congress slipped that change through in winter 2002 (effective in 2006), while almost everyone in the USA was understandably focused upon homeland security issues. Fixed borrower rates, however, are currently in both programs and defeat the argument that the FFEL program has any remaining market-oriented mechanisms. In addition, at least one of the Congressional bills pending would return borrower interest rates to variable interest rate.

    Feudi, FFEL and DL are both governmental social welfare programs. The requirements are similar. If DL is perceived as more complex, more labor intensive and less user friendly it is only because lenders and guarantors, in an aggressive effort to hold onto schools over the past 15 years, misled them about the true requirements of the FFEL program. FFEL is a far more complex program (have you looked at the regs) than DL, but lack of enforcement allowed lenders and guarantors to sell a 'FFEL lite' program to the schools under false pretenses. In addition, they performed many tasks which, under the 1985 prohibited inducement rules, they were not even permitted to perform on behalf of schools; again, lack of enforcement. While, unlike MRU was doing, it is unfair to blame financial aid administrators for all the problems of the past 40 years, college presidents themselves will have to change their attitude. If you listen to FAAs, they say they are under the thumb of college presidents who don't provide them with resources. College presidents are going to need to stop treating the financial aid office as a profit center and begin viewing it as a cost center -- with substantial investment needed to manage those costs during the future decades. It should have been that way all along, but schools were spoiled. Enforcement in FFEL was almost nil due in part to all the confusing layers of middlemen, and the resulting almost-complete lack of transparency allowed the mice to play. Banks, state lenders and not-for-profits had the ear of college presidents telling them one-side of the story -- the benefits but not the burdens of enforcement and oversight.

    Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, AIG, and bailouts are epitomies of FFEL, not DL. Remember the ECASLA bailout? Oh, yes, we are still living that nightmare. Talk about a future of defaults, the FFEL ECASLA loans are trouble brewing and waiting to happen.The myth of adminstrative costs continues to arise whenever a red herring is needed. DL has one tenth the employees of Sallie, with a larger portfolio. Look at Nelnet and Citibank. Even if DL's admin costs became the most bloated in the world, it wouldn't matter; with hundreds of billions of dollars in loans a hundred million dollars in admin is like tax on a cheeseburger. In addition, the huge marketing staffs currently part of the FFEL program structure would go away. The focus would be the borrower. Borrowers are repaying the taxpayer, not lenders, in DL -- that is the big difference which cannot be overcome by FFEL advocates. And what about the dusty state government agency lenders whose FFEL advocacy is dominating the SAFRA negotiations? They make DL look like the most efficient, capitalist organization on wheels.