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US: Student loans costs to rise from credit crisis
By Naomi Spencer
4 March 2008
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Millions of college students are facing higher loan rates and
tighter lending standards under the impact of the US credit crisis.
In the past month, several large providers of student loans announced
they were suspending their programs altogether, due largely to
the collapse of financial backing in bond markets. Other lenders
have implemented more restrictive borrowing standards, locking
out many younger, poorer students.
Higher education costs pose formidable financial challenges,
and the loan rate increases and restrictions will put more strains
on already struggling students and their families. Many students
have little choice but to take out private loans, use credit cards,
and find other ways to fund soaring tuition, with no guarantee
of a decent wage job upon leaving school.
The US credit crisis began in the subprime housing mortgage
market, but has rapidly spread to other forms of debt. Many institutions
that provide loans, including student loan agencies, fund their
operations by selling securities to investors. As investors have
grown wary of buying debt, however, the loan providers have raised
rates or stopped lending to students.
Both federally-guaranteed loans, which generally provide lower
fixed rates, and private loans have been affected by the turmoil
in credit markets. One of the largest student lenders in the country,
the Pennsylvania Higher Education Assistance Agency (PHEAA), said
that, effective this month, it would no longer offer federally
guaranteed loans.
According to the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, the organization
had planned to lend $500 million to 140,000 students, but that
those students would now have to find aid elsewhere.
The agencys situation is like that of many state, municipal,
and non-profit entities dependent on the bond market. In February,
the Michigan Higher Education Student Loan Authority, the Missouri
Higher Education Loan Authority, and other organizations also
cut loan programs due to loss of investor backing.
In an article published on Monday, the Washington Post quoted
Tom Joyce, a spokesman for Sallie Mae, the leading US student
loan provider: Right now the securitization market for private
loans is not there. And if you thought there was an asset class
that would be okay, it would be federal loans that have a guarantee
from the government. But even that market has gone from tremors
to earthquakes.
Until recently, bonds sold by student loan agencies had been
considered a secure buy for investors because students pay back
their debts at a fairly high rate. In the wake of the subprime
mortgage crisis, however, investors have become increasingly skeptical
of bonds previously considered safe, including those used to finance
federally-guaranteed student loans In particular, the credit crisis
has wreaked havoc in the auction-rate municipal bond market, upon
which many student lenders are dependent.
PHEAA interim chief executive James Preston explained the decision
to suspend loans to the New York Times in an article published
on February 28. Widespread lack of confidence in the capital
market has spilled over into other asset classes, driving up our
cost of borrowing and denying us the capital needed to fund new
student loans.
In addition to state agencies such as PHEAA, the National Association
of Student Financial Aid Administrators reports that major lenders
including Sallie Mae Corporation, College Loan Corporation, EdSouth,
and Brazos Higher Education Service have all failed to get backing
at recent securitization auctions.
Like the PHEAA, The College Loan Corporation has discontinued
its federally guaranteed loans.
Sallie Mae, Wells Fargo, and Nelnet have all announced stiffer
rules for loan approval, including requiring higher credit ratings
from applicants. For the typical young adult with little credit
history, securing funding for college will be more difficult,
and cost more.
Poorer students will be particularly hard hit, because they
are seen by loan agencies as greater risks for default. According
to the Post, Those attending institutions with high
graduation rates and low default rates among their alumni may
still be able to get low-cost private loans. Students at lower-ranked
schools with higher defaults among graduates are likely to get
hit with stiffer fees and rates.
Sallie Mae, the largest student lender in the US, also announced
it would no longer offer loans to students enrolled in some for-profit
vocational and career schools and community colleges. As a result,
thousands more working class students will be either priced out
of higher education altogether or will be forced to take on variable-interest
loans from the private sector.
Loans are the only way many families and individuals can afford
post-secondary education or job training. As the cost of college
has spiked, both wages and grant aid have stagnated or declined
over the past ten years. As a result, debt levels have more than
doubled over the period. Currently, two in every three university
undergraduate students bear some debt, with the average debt load
upon graduation exceeding $19,000.
A large amount of the growth in loan debt is concentrated in
the private loan industry. A decade ago, private loans represented
only a tiny fraction of total loan volume. But in the past two
years, partly as a consequence of the housing market contraction
and consequent shrinking of home equity, working families have
turned to private loans for alternative sources of funds, and
private lending has exploded into an $18.5 billion industry.
The World Socialist Web Site spoke to several students
at Virginia Commonwealth University about the difficulties facing
college students.
A sophomore complained about the enormous debt burden he will
have upon graduating college. Basically, all this works
out to nothing, he said. I have $20,000 worth of debt
already. And it just doesnt seem worth it. I feel like I
am wasting my time here.
Adam, a senior, spoke about the restrictions placed on students
who graduate with a high debt burden. The educational experience
is supposed to change who you are, he said, And you
start to understand how the world works. Say you get this great
passionate drive inside yourself, and you now have the knowledge
to go out and change the world.
Adam said that there was a catch-22, however: student
loans. Do I go and take a $60,000 a year job in corporate
America, which is going to perpetuate everything I learned about
in school to help fix, so that I can have a minimal standard of
living, so I can pay off my student loans? It puts me in a very
hard position.
See Also:
US: Cities, education funds,
transport authorities hit by credit crisis
[19 February 2008]
US: Student loan debt
bearing down on graduates
[17 December 2007]
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