The Great Student Loan War
Written on 8:32 AM by 555
There is currently a great schism going on in the student loan industry - a war if you will. The question is how funds will be allocated and who will benefit.
For such a noble purpose, the student loan industry has certainly had an overtone of negativity. It is a highly profitable business to be in and competition has resulted in many scandals. The question now is whether the entire system needs to readjusted or not. In the opinion of President Obama, it does. The banks in the industry feel the opposite.
To understand the war underway on student loans, you first have to understand a key factor in how the government promotes their use. As with many financial tools, the government does not primarily give money directly to students. It does a bit, but mostly subsidies the lenders to make sure there is money on the market. This is a hugely profitable situation for lenders.
President Obama has noted that it ends up costing taxpayers far more to use this middleman process versus just making direct loans to students. Some estimates put the cost of using lenders at roughly $9 per $100 loaned versus a cost of less than $2 per $100 lent with direct loans. With this in mind, President Obama wants to end subsidies to lenders and reconfigure the scenario to a situation where loans are made directly to students.
As you can imagine, the banks and lenders are up in arms over this. They face the loss of their golden goose and are hiring lobbyist right and left to fight the measure. There is really no good reason for the subsidies, so the banks have fallen back on the claim that the new approach will cost jobs. Sallie Mae went so far as to pull back 2,000 jobs it had sent overseas to show how concerned it was. Of course, the company didn't really get into the fact it had sent those jobs overseas in the first place, but there you are!
The student loan plan of President Obama is expected to save between $90 and $200 billion dollars if he can get it passed. That money is earmarked to be converted into direct loans to students. In short, the question is whether we should give the money to the banks or to the students. I know where I come down on that one.
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