The Federal Student Loan System is Catastrophically Failed

Alan Collinge
6 min readNov 18, 2020

--

The President can and must erase them, start over.

There are 44 million federal student loan borrowers in the country carrying about $1.5 Trillion in federal student loan debt. According to Education Secretary Betsy DeVos last year, 75% of these people were either unable to make payments on their loans, or were paying, but their balances were going up. Trump appointee Wayne Johnson, who ran the federal lending system under DeVos, said that this was closer to 80% just before covid-19 hit. Also, we now know that the class of 2004 are defaulting on their loans 40% of the time. These borrowers, however, only borrowed a third of what today’s students are being compelled to borrow. Given this, it is no stretch to say that the default rate for more recent borrowers will surely be 70% if not higher…and even higher still considering this pandemic, and the uneven economic recovery that we are seeing. It is worth noting, here, that at the peak of the mortgage meltdown crisis, the default rate of sub-prime home mortgage loans was less than 20%

There is no easy way to say this: We are witnessing a catastrophically failed lending system in the final stages of its existence.

There are many reasons this catastrophe was allowed to form, persist, and grow to such threatening proportions- too many to list here- but suffice it to say that it was a bipartisan scheme, enabled in part by swamp “experts” claiming to be conservatives, but who were in fact working behind the scenes to perpetuate, rather than fix- or even end- the lending system. Thankfully, as it is becoming increasingly clear that the lending system is in a death spiral, the disguises are coming off of these shills.

At the root of this fiasco is the stripping of nearly every consumer protection from the borrowers. Unlike all other loans in this country, it is essentially impossible to discharge student loans in bankruptcy. Federal student loans have also been stripped of statutes of limitations, Truth in Lending laws, Fair Debt Collection Laws, and others. The Founding Fathers were very concerned about the nation being “conquered and enslaved” by debt and called for uniform bankruptcy laws ahead of the power to raise an army and declare war in the US. Constitution. This student loan catastrophe is certainly what they wished to avoid.

The Department of Education abandoned any pretense of serving the public decades ago, and now fights tooth and nail to perpetuate this lending system- its cash cow. They go to great lengths behind the scenes to keep bankruptcy protections away from these loans, all the while denying loan forgiveness to 99% of the people who qualify for it, and astonishingly, making a profit, not a loss on defaulted loans- a claim no other lender can make, and a defining hallmark of a predatory lending system.

For the first 15 years of my group’s existence, we very moderately fought- to no avail- for the return of standard bankruptcy protections to these loans. Both democrats and republicans privately agreed with us that this needed to happen, but “now” was never a good time. So…the can was kicked down the road. Year after year, decade after decade.

It is now too late to just return bankruptcy protections to these loans. At this late date, such a move would only ensure the bankruptcies of ten-million, twenty-million, maybe even more Americans. This would overwhelm the bankruptcy courts, who typically see about a million cases per year. Not to mention: the federal government has no business bankrupting its citizens. We are a better country than that.

The only reasonable solution at this point is total erasure. In conservative parlance: Take the lending system to the bath, and drown it in the tub.

It turns out that the Higher Education Act gives the Secretary of Education- and thus the President- all the executive authority needed to cancel all federally owned loans, which account for about 85% of all student loans. This could be done without needing congressional approval, appropriation, and without adding anything to the national debt. At a time when we are throwing trillions out in loans to businesses that don’t have to be repaid (and that add to the national debt), there is no better way to stimulate the economy.

Analysts have predicted that cancelling student loans will increase GDP by about $100 billion for the next ten years, but they do not take into account the borrowing capacity (and thus spending) that such a move would free up. This would be another $1 Trillion injected into the economy in the near and medium term. Some even believe that debt cancellation is the only way to avoid a depression.

We started calling for this in August 2019, and in March of 2020 started a petition similarly. The petition did well, and within 6 months had amassed over a half million signatures. Then in September, Elizabeth Warren and Chuck Schumer began to echo the call with a senate resolution calling for loan cancellation by executive order. Today, the media is abuzz about the President’s power to cancel student loans by executive order, and beltway groups are now hopping on the bandwagon. All indications are that Joe Biden, when seated, could cancel either $10,000 for all federal borrowers, or possibly “up to $50,000”, as Warren and Schumer are calling for.

Unfortunately, the remedies being floated are wholly inadequate. A $10,000 write down is inconsequential for most borrowers. “Up to $50,000” could mean anything, and with all the strings attached would give the unelected, unappointed leadership at the Department of Education (who have no desire or intentions of actually cancelling loans) everything needed to bureaucratize the cancellation into meaninglessness, like they have done with every other loan cancellation program put before them.

After 15 years of careful observation of the lending system, it is obvious that what we are seeing currently is yet another political ploy by the establishment to perpetuate this unconstitutional, nationally threatening, terminal lending system a few more years, despite all the real societal harm it will cause.

The time for partial, bad-faithed half-measures is long past. Almost no one is paying on their loans right now, and if the unelected bureaucrats, lobbyists, and other student loan swamp players think that many- or maybe even any- will resume feeding this dying beast, they are dead wrong. The people have woken up to this scam, and will eliminate it by popular rejection if necessary. The citizens hold the gold. They make the rules. Going forward, I would say that resuming payments on one’s federal student loans- whatever their financial situation- is both unwise, and unpatriotic.

This is really more of an opportunity than a crisis. This is the perfect time to come up with a more fair, rationally priced higher education financing system that actually helps students, rather than exploit them, and there are many good ideas out there that could be implemented rather quickly. But that is a conversation to be had over the course of this pandemic, as the country dusts itself off, and gets back on its feet.

Both President Trump and Joe Biden should inculcate this fact. Over half of the 44 million affected borrowers identify as being either politically independent, or republican, and over half never even graduated, so the media-perpetuated stereotype of student loan borrowers as liberal, antifa protesters, is totally wrong. These borrowers cross most all political and demographic lines, and as a voting block comprise nearly enough people to elect a President outright.

The party that actually solves this will be greatly rewarded for years, perhaps decades to come.

If this issue is concerning to you, please sign the petition, and join StudentLoanJustice.Org.

--

--

Alan Collinge

I am Founder of StudentLoanJustice.Org, author of The Student Loan Scam (Beacon Press), and creator of the petition Change.Org/CancelStudentLoans