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To Lend or Not to Lend?

May 12, 2009

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In the wake of shrunken endowments, credit crises, and budget cuts, it seems difficult to remember that only a year ago, the big news regarding college financing was that a number of wealthy colleges and universities were taking steps to enhance their financial aid programs by eliminating or reducing student loan expectations. At the time when those steps were taken, I was not convinced of their efficacy. The events of the past year have done little to change my view, and have made it even more important that those of us in higher education deploy our financial aid resources and define our priorities as carefully as possible.

Some of the wealthiest and most selective colleges and universities, including Harvard, Yale, and Stanford Universities, and Amherst and Williams Colleges, eliminated loans altogether from their financial aid packaging, and about 20 more eliminated loans for students with family incomes below a designated level. A much smaller number eliminated all tuition for students with families whose income fell below $60,000 per year, and an even smaller number capped the amount paid by families with income levels as high as $200,000 per year.

There was not then, and there is not now, any way to construe this increased commitment to financial aid by the wealthiest institutions as in itself a bad thing. Neither, however, should we deceive ourselves into thinking that most colleges and universities have the resources to follow suit or that these changes will noticeably increase access to higher education in America. There are more than 4,000 two- and four-year colleges and universities in the United States; collectively these institutions educate most of the post-secondary students in the country, and collectively they bear as much financial resemblance to Harvard or Amherst as do the Saint Paul Saints to the New York Yankees. Educational economist Sandy Baum is quoted in The New York Times as observing, rightly, that the changes are “not going to make a dent in educational opportunity” in the U.S. Let’s face it: the students who might now attend Harvard due to more generous aid policies would not otherwise have failed to attend college but would have attended, say, Brown or Vassar or the University of Michigan. They are not among the millions of Americans who are unprepared for a wide variety of reasons to attend any college at all.

The truth is that the three dozen or so wealthy institutions that have altered their aid policies are competing with one another for the same group of high-achieving lower and middle income students and are perhaps recruiting some of those students away from institutions slightly less selective. They are not, despite the headlines, altering the landscape of higher education in America.

Even before the arrival of the current recession, the vast majority of colleges and universities in our country had dramatically smaller endowment per student ratios, a much higher percentage of students receiving aid, and far less robust fund raising efforts than did the colleges and universities garnering attention. Efforts by these institutions to emulate the policies of the wealthiest few would require severe cuts in personnel and services or, perhaps even worse, sharp reductions in the number of students receiving financial aid, as more dollars were allocated to fewer recipients. So before we push with too much gusto for others to emulate Harvard and Yale, we must be sure to understand the implications of such changes in practice.

The most interesting and vexing questions on this subject are less financial than practical and philosophical: Is the elimination of loans the best and fairest way to increase economic access to any institution? And has the elimination of loans by a very tiny subset of American colleges and universities fostered the belief — deeply mistaken, in my view — that there is something economically and even morally wrong about borrowing for higher education, while we accept without much question (or did until recently) the logic of borrowing for a house or car or boat? Does it make sense to eliminate loan expectations based on family income level rather than post-graduate plans, so that, for instance, some economics majors who go to work for investment banks will be loan-free while some history majors who join Teach for America will have loan burdens — based purely on the level of family income when they enrolled in college?

Given the enormous demonstrated return on investment, I do not believe that there is anything inappropriate about borrowing toward the costs of college, so long as that loan burden is kept within reasonable limits. At Macalester College, where I serve as president, the total indebtedness from all sources among students who borrow averages, after graduation, roughly $18,800, or about $2,000 less than the sticker price of a Kia Sportage. Neither am I convinced that the elimination of loans is the best way to increase access even to the most elite colleges and universities in the United States. I would be interested in seeing if some of the institutions that have eliminated loans for the relatively small percentage of students on aid, or for the even smaller percentage with family incomes below a designated level, could instead devise plans to increase those percentages substantially. Given the choice between eliminating loans for the 30 or 40 percent of students on aid at many of these schools or maintaining loans and providing aid to 70 percent of students, I would be inclined to choose the latter as the greater social and educational good.

This is not to say that any of us in higher education have ruled out the eventuality of altering aspects of our financial aid packaging, including our packaging of loans. It is simply to say that our approach to such changes, and to the broad challenge of balancing quality and access, must be to act as thoughtfully and as responsibly as possible within the limits of our mission and means and not simply to play the game of follow the leader.

Brian Rosenberg is president of Macalester College.

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Comments on To Lend or Not to Lend?

  • Missing the Point
  • Posted by Student Debtor on May 12, 2009 at 9:45am EDT
  • I think what Dr. Rosenberg fails to see is that many college graduates, regardless of major, will not be able to afford the Kia Sportage payment AND the college loan payment. It is for this reason that students should be encouraged to graduate debt-free if at all possible. The whole idea of going into debt with student loans because of a POSSIBLE future income has ruined the lives of many college graduates in this country. This kind of thinking has to stop!

  • Debtor v Investor Breakeven
  • Posted by Observer on May 12, 2009 at 12:30pm EDT
  • There seems to be a piece of the puzzle missing in this article. Outcomes. We know how post secondary education enriches society. But the question is “does the outcome merit the cost for the individual?”.

    Depending on the education received, the individual and the post graduation outcome; a graduate can fall into one of two categories. 1 - A "student debtor" whose education and their participation in it did not produce results to cover the cost of the debt generated. Or 2 - An "investor" who was able to take that same experience and convert it into a net positive.

    Unless and until the pricing model at our colleges and universities reflect the outcome achieved by their graduates, more graduates are going to find themselves in the “student debtor” group.

    I recognize that outcomes are a very complex issue. It is very difficult to predict how graduates will translate their educational experience into a career path. But some study by our colleges and universities and sharing of the findings with families would go a long way toward creating more investors and fewer debtors.

  • Debt should be taken on very cautiously
  • Posted by Former student debtor on May 12, 2009 at 12:45pm EDT
  • I was lucky and acquired no student loan debt as an undergraduate, between what my middle-class parents could contribute and the academic scholarships I earned. I did, however, take on such debt as a graduate student, and it was a significant burden when I was also trying to make car payments, rent/mortgage payments, and all the other expenses of daily life. It was a great relief when I finally had the student debt paid off.

    It's also important to remember that unlike virtually any other debt, student loan debt does NOT disappear if the debtor must declare bankruptcy. This alone is an excellent reason to try to minimize, if not avoid, student loan debt.

  • What?
  • Posted by Alan Collinge at Studentloanjustice.org on May 12, 2009 at 4:00pm EDT
  • I applaud any attempts to reduce or eliminate student loan debt. The loan system is inflationary, and lacks basic consumer protections. The predatory (www.premierecredit.com) debt trap that results for many (Roughly 1 in three students default, according to a 2003 IG study) is harmful on a large scale.

    As reported by the Seattle Times ( http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/localnews/2008231488_loandaytwo06m.html ) ,

     

    "...The proportion of freshmen and sophomores at four-year colleges who will default on federal loans over their lifetime is estimated at between 19 and 31 percent, depending on the type of loan and when it was written, the department's Office of Inspector General wrote in a 2003 audit.

    Outside of four-year colleges, the figures get even worse: At community colleges, between 30 percent and 42 percent of students are expected to default on their loans; and at for-profit schools, between 38 percent and 51 percent are expected to default, the audit notes. "

  • Should we ask why students are defaulting?
  • Posted by Company Guy on May 12, 2009 at 7:30pm EDT
  • I find it a bit frustrating when the call to eliminate student loans and borrowing for higher education are raised and followed by a litany of student default rate data. My sister and I were both able to go to the undergraduate graduate schools of our choice through preparation, parent savings, and student loans. Without the financial flexibility provided by these loans, we would not have had this option.

    While I think the point is well taken that student loans should carry similar consumer protections as traditional debt vehicles, let's not throw out the entire concept. Let's also consider what causes students to default and what we can do before they enroll in higher education to prevent these defaults such as ensuring strong academic preparation, thoughtful matching of students with institutions, seeking out non-loan sources of financial aid, and discussing the realities of debt repayment before, during and after enrollment. Many of the default rate data that are shared is based not on graduates of higher education, but of those who enrolled for any duration of time.

    Ultimately, individual responsibility comes into play. I know many loan companies and collection agencies have acted counter to public sentiment and interest, but we cannot think to just eliminate a fairly effective lever in college access based on partial information and populist reaction.

    It was hard coming out of college and graduate school with student loan debt as well as facing the financial realities of rent, insurance, and something resembling a social life. We all face many of these same choices and it is critical that we provide students and their parents with meaningful options on how best to finance higher education.

  • Student Loans are not bad
  • Posted by Lucie Lapovsky , Former President at Mercy College on May 13, 2009 at 9:00am EDT
  • This was a much needed article. I actually would go even farther and say that the wealthy colleges have given many students the impression that loans are bad and students should not take them to go to college. I think this may actually reduce access to higher education. At Mercy where our students were very wary of taking out loans, publicity about the loan policies of the very wealthy institutions reinforced their thinking. Students who choose not to take loans often attend college only sporadically or very part-time if at all because they are trying to work to save the necesssary money to attend. These students would be much better served by borrowing, working much less and completing college as quickly as possible. The opportunity cost of the foregone wages that students will earn once they have the degree are the largest cost of higher education for most students.

  • Defaults
  • Posted by LA Jerry , NSCS on May 13, 2009 at 9:45am EDT
  • I appreciate when the people commenting to the story use statistics in their argument/point. It does help lend credibility. However, subtle little words can distort those statistics and give an incorrect picture to readers.

    Take this quote from a previous post: "Roughly 1 in three students default, according to a 2003 IG study."

    Compare that to: "......noted in a U.S. Department of Education audit, which predicts about a quarter of freshmen and sophomores who take out loans will default during their lifetime."

    So, should the previous post actually have read: 'Roughly 1 in three "BORROWERS" default'? One-third of "students" is significantly different than one-third of "borrowers", and, if inaccurate, is very mis-leading.

  • student loan default
  • Posted by n on May 13, 2009 at 10:30am EDT
  • The point is that you have to look at the causes of this, and the causes are due to the predatory lending practices of the big banks, and other private lenders. and the government as well.And you have to look at the fact that the Bush administration supported and allowed this.......

    Default, occurred to many people for many different reasons. Not being able to find work that would support the hefty repayments they were socked with, and this being compounded by illness of themselves or family mambers. There is a big big list......The plain fact is that none of us are dead beats or refused to make payments.........we could not do it., and we all have reasons why that are credible.

    The plain fact is that consumer protection is a fundamental right, and it should be restored,and all of the regulation and deals that George Bush signed off on before he left office that were deals made with the Department of Education and the Banks under guises of not for profit- well those regulations need to be thrown out as well.

    So, ALL the laws enacted during the Bush Administration need to be changed in order to correct this ominous problem, A problem which has been ruining the lives of people who do not deserve to have their lives ruined because of misfortunes that be fell them.......When only one loan industry is targeted as this industry was-- that sends up a huge red flag. People should be asking why just the student population of America was targeted for this and not any other loan industry....As far as Sallie Mae,Wells Fargo, Citi Bank, Bank of America, Chase,etc., are concerned.........they should all never be allowed to service student loans again..........This should be taken from them........They abused it, and all of us.

    I think each and everyone of the congressional republicans in the former Bush Administraton who supported and paid lobbyists to support this debauchery should be indited, and investigated with a fine tooth comb. And furthermore they should be thrown out of office.....

    The plain fact is that this Federal Government, during the Bush Administration, got in bed with the people running the Department of Education, and also the big banks and small lenders ...........................It is time to wash the sheets.

     

    The End.

  • Facts, and Statistics
  • Posted by Alan Collinge at Studentloanjustice.org on May 13, 2009 at 1:30pm EDT
  • I am not attempting to be dramatic or alarmist when I use the 1-in-3 figure for student loan defaults. While the IG Report found a range of between 19-31% for four-year colleges, the rest of my post reveals far more dire estimates for Community (30-42%), and for-profit(38-52%) colleges.

    Taken Together, (25% rate for four-year colleges, 36% for CC's, and 45% for for-profits), I believe a weighted average based on number of students would come out close to 33%, although I admit I have not yet done that calculation. Remember, also, that this forecast probably did not assume a deep recession.

    I also am not attempting to dramatize or alarm when I speak of the people who have been forced off the grid, expatriated, lost their livelihoods, saw their family wealth dissappear, or even worse as a sole result of student loan debt. These are stories that I come across on a daily basis.

     

  • Is there a third way?
  • Posted by Cedrick Andrews , Policy Associate at The Institute for College Access and Success on May 13, 2009 at 5:45pm EDT
  • Federal loan alternatives to private loans President Rosenberg offers a thoughtful and pragmatic viewpoint on the existence of institutional financial aid policies that limit or eliminate student loans from financial aid packages and reduce costs for qualified students and families. The Project on Student Debt maintains a list of schools – public and private, large and small, wealthy and not-so-wealthy – with public financial aid pledges. It is true that many schools cannot afford to simultaneously eliminate loans for the neediest students and provide adequate financial aid to other students with need. However, all schools, and not just the wealthy elites, can strive to assist the neediest students by limiting the amount of debt they must incur and by providing clear, upfront guidance to families struggling to understand how much they will have to pay for college or whether they can even afford the opportunity.

  • Posted by lucere on May 14, 2009 at 11:30pm EDT
  • All college education should be free, regardless of "academic achievement" or "parental income," which, as some will know, does not mean the parents have savings or will contribute a single cent to their child's education. There is no more equitable system. Students who are drowning in their student loan debt currently should be covered by restoring standard consumer protections.

  • Posted by Aleks Ontman at www.XStudentDebt.com on May 18, 2009 at 3:30pm EDT
  • Lucere,
    who is going to pay for all that "freedom"? Gov't has no money and in any case if you want to see what our universities will become if Gov't takes over just look at any inner-city high school.
    Students who are dawning in debt, for the most part, didn't consider the cost of the education they obtained. Sometimes sitting down and doing the whole cost/benefit analysis isn't such a bad idea.

    Aleks