On Education

The Problem with Federal Loan Forgiveness Programs

May 28, 2008 RSS Feed Print
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One of the Education Department's top higher education officials says there are significant problems with two of the most-trumpeted new loan forgiveness programs designed to help students afford college.

The public service loan forgiveness program that will begin in 2009 makes good headlines, Diane Auer Jones, assistant secretary for postsecondary education, told attendees of a Washington, D.C., College Savings Foundation conference this month. But many idealistic students hoping to get out from under their federal education debts will be sorely disappointed, she says.

"Guess what? You have to make 10 years of payments," before the remainder of the loan is forgiven, she notes. And most federal education loans are 10-year loans, which means there will be nothing left to be forgiven.

The Education Department is worried "some students will see the program and take on more debt than they would have otherwise, not realizing it is unlikely that most of it will be forgiven," she says.

In addition, the new "Teach grants" that this year started paying up to $4,000 a year to those studying to be teachers in needy schools will turn into costly mistakes for the vast majority of recipients, she says. Teachers who do not end up working in classrooms that qualify as "high need" will see those grants they received while in school turn into loans. Jones says the Education Department's experience with other similar programs indicates 80 percent of the recipients of Teach grants will have to pay them back with interest. The problem, she says, is that newly graduated teachers are having trouble getting hired by what she called "dysfunctional" but needy schools.

Robert Shireman, director of the Project on Student Debt, says that people should realize the new public service forgiveness program will help only those who take low-paying public service jobs. Borrowers who take on high-paying government or nonprofit jobs will have to pay off their loans, he said.

Anyone hoping to take advantage of the loan forgiveness program should make sure to consolidate loans with the federal government's new Income-based Repayment option, Shireman said. That way, low-paid public service workers will have to pay only a reasonable portion of their salary toward their loans, which could be lower than the regular loan payment. After 120 payments, the remainder of the loan will be forgiven. More information can be found at ibrinfo.org.

Congressional staffers say they are working on fixes to the Teach grant law to prevent the kind of unhappy surprises Jones warns of. A major education bill currently being discussed in House-Senate negotiations would broaden the definition of high-need classrooms and give the Education Department the power to give breaks to students who try but fail to get hired by needy schools.

Tags:
loans,
student loans,
paying for college,
Department of Education,
paying for graduate school

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American higher education is nothing but a pyramid scheme, a mail order fraud and a debtor's prison. It has become a dangerous place for anyone who can't pay cash for the bloated bureaucracy and craven greed of the American academic administrative class.

America's 'education' leaders should be tarred, feathered and run out of town on a rail, like the carpetbagging white collar criminals that they are. Everyone should turn on these con artists and their benefactors and rip them to shreds.

They make liars like politicians, corporate executives and used car salesmen look honest by comparison. And we now have more overpaid and totally corrupt university administrators than we do full time professors in the American Academy. The average wage of an adjunct professor is 20,000 a year and they teach most of the courses. So where did all the money go?

As anyone who has ever scrutinized a university budget with an honest eye, bloated administrations, paying themselves top dollar, have further squandered their money on corporate schemes that benefit no one but the corporations.

Wonder why your tuiton bill is so high? Its because it was calculated by administrative theives who robbed you of your future, while they imprisoned you in inescapable debt, as they gutted the educational system to pay for their corporate fraud. Another rotten corner of our terminally corrupt country.

Unless you go to an elite private school, there's no point in going at all. Only the privileged get permanent jobs these days. The rest of us just get robbed of our futures and imprisoned in debt. The privileged can go to hell.

Dr. T, phd. of MA 11:44AM March 21, 2013

its had when you have four kids and really no body to help out with the kids while you go to school bills get behide but you have to keep on pushing for your kids and this would help out with all my problems

etosha starke of FL 10:25AM November 17, 2011

Here we have equity and inequity simultaneously. What gives?

SK of CA 2:51AM September 30, 2010

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