Wednesday, November 7, 2018
A Mouthpiece for Lenders
“Unfortunately, under your leadership, the
Bureau has abandoned the very consumers it is tasked by Congress with
protecting… “Instead, you have used the Bureau to serve the wishes of the most
powerful financial companies in America.” From
the letter of resignation of student loan ombudsman, Seth Frotman, for the
Consumer Financial Protection Bureau
In
2005, because of what was then-perceived as a flagrant abuse of bankruptcy
laws, Congress passed an amendment to our bankruptcy code making it
exceptionally difficult, almost impossible for most, for those who took out
loans to finance their higher education to cancel such debts in bankruptcy.
That change gave rise to an accelerated business sector: for-profit
post-secondary schools (trade and tech training schools and colleges and
universities designed to make money as their primary mission). Dozens and
dozens of “new for-profit schools” were built to capitalize on this massive
change in our credit laws.
Knowing
that enrolling students could be enticed into taking on significant student
debts that could not be avoided in bankruptcy – especially if the job
expectations could be “amplified” – was the cornerstone of that effort. “Student
loans have seen almost 157% cumulative growth over the last 11 years. In
contrast, auto loan debt has grown 52% while mortgage and credit card debt
actually fell about 1%, according to a Bloomberg Global Data analysis of
federal and private loans.” Los Angeles Times, October 21st.
The
hype and marketing, the false statistics, combined with insidious and quite
predatory recruiting efforts gave rise to a dramatic trend of fraudulent
enticement to students who really could not afford the burden of those loans. Students
also cannot afford the legal costs of challenging those fraudulent claims,
often quite flagrant, and even when the U.S. Department of Education forced
some of the most egregious for-profit institutions to close, where the students
didn’t even receive the mediocre training they paid for, lenders clamored for
loan repayment.
The
Obama administration, through the Department of Education and the Consumer
Financial Protection Bureau, created a program to relieve students of such debt
when related to one of these failed institutions. Under Trump-Education
Secretary Betsy DeVos, the government pressed to unravel and reduce the level of
debt relief accorded to such defrauded students, although courts have
consistently ruled against such efforts.
High
profile closures – like ITT Technical Institute and Corinthian Colleges who
thrived on federally-backed student loans – were the poster-companies for such
misdirection. But make no mistake, these closures are a drop in the bucket when
you consider that there are now about 3,500 such for-profit post-secondary
educational/training schools and colleges in the United States. The abundance
of federally-backed non-dischargeable student loans also fueled a level of
tuition increases across the board… private and public, non-profit and
for-profit. Tuition soared above the increases in the cost of living within
every other segment of the economy.
For
young adults, seeking to better their live, the consequences of a world where
average student debt hovers above $39 thousand can be dire. See my The New Americans:
Young, Stressed and Almost Broke August 31st
blog, for example. The Trump administration has pretty much abandoned any
pretense of consumer protection, and students mired in debt have become
sacrificial lambs. The November 2nd FastCompany.com embellishes:
“Frotman
charged that the once-independent watchdog organization [Consumer Financial
Protection Bureau – CFPB] had become a partisan arm of the administration,
curbing oversight of lenders. In his letter, he accused the agency of
suppressing a report that revealed evidence that several giant banks were
‘saddling [students] with legally dubious account fees.’ Student loan debt was
getting out of control, and the one government agency tasked with helping the
borrowers was no longer doing so.
“In
the 10 years since the financial crash, student loan debt has increased to unprecedented
heights. Currently, tens of millions of Americans owe a total sum in excess of
$1.5 trillion. This situation was created by an increase in for-profit
institutions, overall increasing tuition, as well as an influx of predatory
lenders. And the current CFPB, which was originally tasked with advocating for
citizens at the heart of this crisis, is increasingly seen as a mouthpiece for
lenders…
“‘Cash
flow is the main issue most students face,’ [says Charlie Javice, who built an
online platform, Frank, to help
students figure out every financial aid program they could possibly be eligible
for]. Loan disbursement, she explains, happens twice a semester for students.
Often, they receive the money after they were supposed to throw down cash for
hefty cost items like textbooks. ‘To show you how dire the problem is,’ she
says, ‘one-third of students are applying for [high-interest] payday loans.’”
Loans,
rife with confusing documents, invoices and accounting statements, are sold and
then resold in the commercial debt exchange markets… each transaction pushing
the loan farther and farther away from the original educational purpose.
Students are literally left out to dry with strangers who have no real nexus to
the underlying reason for the loan.
For
students struggling to pay bills in a market that may provide better jobs for
those with experience but offer gig and other lower-paying jobs to
all-but-the-most skilled/educated applicants, the pay levels are forcing almost
a third of young adults to live with their parents. The balance tipped four
years ago: “In 2014, for the first time in more than
130 years, adults ages 18 to 34 were slightly more likely to be living in their
parents’ home than they were to be living with a spouse or partner in their own
household.” May 24, 2014 Pew Research Center study. Trump’s unemployment
numbers blithefully skip over these frightening undertones.
“One
of the only allies on the side of debt-laden students and fighting against
current trends in loan policy are lawyers. One New York-based group–the For-Profit Schools Project,
which is an arm of the New York Legal Assistance Group (NYLAG)–advocates and
provides legal services for generally low-income New Yorkers being targeted by
predatory players in the student loan game. For-profit colleges are notorious
for targeting low-income students, roping them into unaffordable tuitions,
high-interest loans, and practically useless degrees. Many other nonprofit
legal services groups, both national and local, have stepped into the breach to
help thousands of students saddled with crushing debt…
“For-profit
colleges have been around for decades, and their predatory nature is not
necessarily a new problem. In fact, one of NYLAG’s co-directors has been
fighting these businesses in the courtroom for years. But in recent years, the
challenges have been magnified. ‘The last few years,’ says [Jessica Ranucci, an
attorney at NYLAG], ‘we’ve gotten more involved; much more of our litigation is
focused on for-profit schools.’” But for most students struggling with student
debt, they live in a world of harassing debt-collectors and a dearth of the
promised jobs that would have allowed them to earn enough to start their lives
with hope and dignity.
I’m Peter Dekom, and unless we are
willing to continue to betray our children, we seriously need a ground-up
restructuring of the entire United States’ system of funding higher education.
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