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2003 Essays -
August
*A note from the author: It
is my sincere hope that anyone considering obtaining a student loan will
read this prior to committing to thousands of dollars and many years of
debt. While laws and regulations concerning student loans change often and
can vary based on the year the loan was obtained, the information outlined
here is intended to be representative of the student loan system in
general. PLEASE NOTE: THIS ESSAY HAS NOT BEEN UPDATED TO REFLECT ANY
CHANGES WHICH MIGHT HAVE TAKEN PLACE SINCE IT FIRST APPEARED IN
2003.*
"STUDENT LOANS - OPEN SECRECTS OF THE SYSTEM AND WHAT YOU NEED
TO KNOW"
Man
plans, God laughs - or so the saying goes - and students plan as well.
Every year thousands of them plan for a future including an undergraduate
education or graduate school. Many take out student loans to help meet
ever-increasing tuition costs, fees and living expenses. Few, however,
realize that once they've signed on the dotted line they just may have
acquired a debt FOR LIFE.
For LIFE,
you say? Well, at least for a full working life through retirement age,
that is. While a majority will never experience anything more than the
standard ten-year repayment period, and while everyone hopes for the best,
what happens if something goes wrong? What happens when plans go awry and
a person can't meet his or her loan obligations? Several options exist
along the way, to be sure. But among the most expensive are debt
consolidation programs which can extend the repayment period from 10 to as
long as 30 years.
Considering the average undergraduate
finishes college in the early 20's, and a graduate student in the mid- to
late- 20's or early 30's, some students could conceivably be paying off
their debts until they are nearing retirement age. And although most
people don't know it, unlike other debts, student loans are generally NOT
DISCHARGEABLE in bankruptcy.
So what
happens? In order to understand the full process, it is necessary to
understand the genesis of the student loan system, the process by which
most students obtain their loans, the options available for repayment, and
the issue of non-dischargeability of loans through the bankruptcy courts,
except by special petition.
The Higher
Education Act of 1965
The
student loan program which exists today had its genesis in the Higher
Education Act of 1965. In the legislative history for the act as contained
in Volume 2 of the U.S. Code Congressional and Administrative News,
several reasons were cited for the "pressing requirements for fresh,
vigorous congressional action in the field of student financial
assistance" (p. 4053). These included "the continuing upward spiral of the
cost of education beyond high school, the rapidly mounting size of high
school graduating classes - beginning with the record-setting number of
graduates in the June 1965 class - and the aggravated plight of students
who do not have the means to acquire education." (p. 4053).
By that
time, the postwar middle class had grown immensely. As the "baby boom"
children reached college age, it was noted that "financial pressure now
bears heavily not only on the low and lower-middle income families but
also on middle and upper-middle income families who only a few years ago
would have been adequately capable of paying for their children's
education." (p. 4059). In order to alleviate this financial burden, it was
proposed that the "heavy concentration of expenses should be spread out
over more than four years of college through the 'loan of convenience'
described in part B of title IV" (p. 4060). Hence the birth of the
Guaranteed Reduced Interest Loans to Students program, or the Guaranteed
Student Loan program as it is commonly known today. Back then it was
described as a part of the "national commitment to offer every child the
fullest possible educational opportunity" (p. 4060), and a "FINAL LINE OF
FINANCIAL DEFENSE for families and students from all levels of income."
(p. 4061).
In the
nearly 40 years since the program's inception, not much has changed as far
as the original justifications for [the program's] existence. College
costs still continue to rise, and lower- and middle-income families still
face difficulties in paying for their children's educations. As the
program has grown, and the number of students obtaining student loans has
increased, however, the system has begun to show signs of strain. And
often those who pay the highest price - both literally and figuratively -
are the students who can least afford it. That is not to say that student
loans are inherently bad, for in this author's opinion they are not. Many
lives have been changed for the better by their availability. Perhaps one
of the greatest problems on the borrowing side is that for many the loans
have gone from being a "final line of financial defense" to true "loans of
convenience" in every sense of the word, or easy money.
Photograph "Morning" © 2011 Dorothy A. Birsic
Choosing a School
and Obtaining a Loan
While
each person's motivation for attending college or graduate school is
highly personal, the process for getting there is fairly standard. One
applies, gets accepted or rejected, picks a program, and (assuming one
doesn't have a full scholarship or an otherwise free ride) figures out how
to pay for it. In most cases, the school determines a student's need and
aid eligibility, then tells the person what they will offer and how much
the student and/or student's family must contribute.
In
judging the affordability of a program and choosing the option to accept
student loans, a few "reasoned assumptions" may come into play. They are
that 1) The loans will be repayed from future earnings, 2) The education,
particularly in the case of graduate school, will be applied over the
course of a professional lifetime, and 3) Estimates of potential earnings
can roughly be approximated from public information (published newspaper
and magazine articles and surveys, school brochures, career guides, etc.)
and private sources (friends, colleagues, others who have attended the
same or similar programs, etc.).
In evaluating
most major schools, graduate programs in particular, one invariably
comes across some type of ranking list. To view what one law school
calls "The Ranking Game," go to http://www.law.indiana.edu/, then click
on "The Law School Ranking Game" notation in the lower right portion of the page.
|
Of course
there is some risk in making this evaluation. For many four-year colleges
and graduate schools today, the amount of loan aid to students is close or
equal to, if not more than, the amount people pay as down payments on
their homes. In this regard, even the courts have expressed some opinion
in the matter. In a case dealing with student loans, Matter of Rivers, 213
BR 616 (page 621, Footnote 4), it is stated that:
" . . . While a home buyer
thinks in terms of a multiple of present gross income to predict the
amount of an affordable mortgage, a student loan debtor must look beyond
present income to some point in the future, to predict the amount of
student debt which can be repaid without hardship. This is because there
must be some interval of time before a debtor might begin to fully enjoy
the financial benefits of the investment in education. While the income
prospects of debtors will vary, the method of analysis of their respective
abilities to service debt might be the same. They should each be able to
afford debt payments which bear some relation to the amount of income they
can expect to receive. Testing hypothetical scenarios, and noting the use
of a rule of thumb in the mortgage lending industry, it may be reasonable
to conclude that a student loan debtor should be able to repay without
'substantial hardship' a debt in the amount of gross income he or she
expects to receive in the tenth year of employment. When considering the
various educational possibilities and costs associated with them, this
rule of thumb may offer an additional avenue of analysis to aid in
determining whether the educational debt is out of proportion to the
earning ability of the student."
In the
original essay, a link to a BusinessWeek article appeared
here. That link is no longer valid.
|
For many,
the risk of assuming the financial burden is obviously more than offset by
the perceived future value of what can be expected upon the completion of
an undergraduate or graduate degree. So, with acceptance letter in hand,
the final process for obtaining the loan(s) begins. Although exact
procedures may vary from state to state and agency to agency, most student
loan applications are simple one-page forms. Little more than one's name,
the name of the institution one will be attending, the amount of money
requested and a signature are required, and the paperwork can be completed
quickly. Indeed, one internet-based student loan provider has advertised
that on-line applicants can have their applications processed in one
minute. After that - presto! A check for half the total amount (in the
case of a program with two terms per academic year) appears at the school
each semester.
Fast
forward ahead to the end of school and the start of loan payments. The
regimen is standard and prescribed by law. Repayments usually begin six
months after a student's graduation date. Shortly before the first payment
is due, the loan holder is notified of the total amount owing, the amount
of the monthly payments and the applicable interest rate. Unless otherwise
stated, repayment rates are calculated based on a ten-year period. For
some loans such as the Stafford Loans, the balance owing at graduation is
the same as the original amount borrowed. For others, such as the
Supplemental Loans, interest is capitalized during the student's years in
school, then added to the principal balance owing at
graduation.
The
concept of interest capitalization is one with which every student loan
holder should be very familiar. Capitalized interest is interest due on a
loan which, after having accrued for a certain period, becomes principal
and is added to the principal balance owing. In the case of Supplemental
Loans, for example, no payments are due as long as the student is still in
school. During that period, however, interest begins to accrue. One is
given the option of paying the interest immediately. If not paid, however,
it is capitalized and added to the principal balance when the student
begins making post-graduation payments. In effect, the capitalization
process becomes one of paying not only interest on original principal but
also paying interest on interest.
A person
making regular payments for the normal life of the loan is unlikely to
have additional capitalized interest included in scheduled repayments. But
again, what if something happens? There ARE many options available.
Although most have the advantage of lowering or temporarily suspending
payments, almost all bear some type of penalty for the loan holder. Three
broad categories of those options are described below.
Forebearance
The first
option to consider if it is necessary to halt payments is forebearance.
This is a suspending of loan payments due primarily to unemployment or
economic hardship. Although there are other types of forebearances, such
as for full-time students, those wil be discussed later. The maximum
period allowed under law for those programs, three years, is set in Title
20 of the U.S. Code Section 1087dd.
Economic
hardship as the term relates to student loans is defined in Section 1085
(o) of Title 20 of the U.S. Code. The three definitions are: 1) Full-time
earnings which do not exceed the greater of the minimum wage rate or an
amount equal to 100 percent of the poverty line for a family of two, 2) A
Federal educational burden which equals or exceeds 20 percent of a
borrower's adjusted gross income, with additional criteria based on
comparisons to minimum wage and the poverty line, and 3) other criteria
determined by the Secretary of Education in which the borrower's income
and debt-to-income are considered as primary factors.
At first
glance, the advantages of a forebearance are many and the disadvantages
are few. As with the initial loan, the application process is easy and
usually involves no more than the completion of a single short form. Loan
payments cease immediately upon approval, and for many, a short one to
three year break from payments may be all that is necessary to regain
financial footing. However, all interest accrued during the period is
capitalized and added to the principal balance at the time when new
payments begin. Depending on the length of the forebearance and the total
amount owing, this can add up to hundreds or even thousands of dollars on
top of the already-existing debt.
Photograph © 2011 Dorothy A.
Birsic
Loan Consolidation
The
second option available is student loan consolidation or refinancing. Over
the years Sallie Mae (the Student Loan Marketing Association) has referred
to two programs of this nature as the Select Step and Smart Loan Accounts.
Programs of this kind allow a person to lower payments in the short term
in exchange for extending the overall loan repayment period from 10 years
to as long as 30 years. The borrower usually must commit up front to a
post-consolidation amount due which can be more than double the amount of
the loans originally obtained. Interest-only payments can be made for
either the first two or four years following the consolidation, and for
those who would prefer to make a small payment rather than no payment at
all, this may be preferable.
Here
again, however, the comparison of a student loan to a mortgage might be
used. The original promissory notes signed by a student indicate a
repayment period of not more than ten years. If a person voluntarily
commits to extending the repayment period beyond ten years, the person is
in effect assuming a mortgage-like debt without the same benefits as a
mortgage. By this the author means that from the moment someone begins
making mortgage payments they begin building tangible equity in the value
of their home. This is not necessarily true in the case of the purchase of
an education. In fact, if a student is forced to consider consolidation
based on an inability to reach a projected level of income or apply an
academic credential in an intended field, it is almost the exact
opposite.
Say a
person obtains a student loan initially as the basis for what might be
termed "professional" or "employment" equity in their future (which
includes an assumption of an income necessary to make payments on the
loans). Any extension of the 10-year period might be looked at more as a
decrease in that "professional equity" than a reflection of the increasing
value of an education. Also, at the end of a 15- or 30- year mortgage, a
home owner is free to sell the home and pocket the profits, which is not a
concept one can apply to student loan debt of the same nature.
Other Forebearance and Debt Rescheduling Options
Numerous
other programs exist, including income-sensitive repayment accounts. These
accounts, if approved, can be used to adjust payments based on
income-dependent criteria. These have the effect of lowering monthly
payments without placing the loans in forebearance or undertaking a
consolidation. As with other payments of this nature, however, monthly
payments must be at least equal to the amount of interest due on the
account for any given month. If such relief is sought early on in the
repayment period, it may be of little value in substantially lowering
payments. This is because interest is a much greater component of monthly
debt than principal in the initial stages of paying back the
loan.
Finally,
public service forebearances exist for those who serve in professions such
as teacher in a designated teacher shortage area, or member of the armed
forces, or for those in the Peace Corps. Again, while the forebearance
period may provide a cushion of time in which to rebuild financial
footing, it does nothing to actually decrease the student's debt. Interest
still accrues on the account and is capitalized at the end of the
forebearance period.
While
many students find solutions in the programs listed so far, some do not.
Without resolution of the debt or the rescheduling of payments, it is
likely that the loans will slip into default.
An article
entitled "College Loans Rise, Swamping Graduates' Dreams" by
reporter Greg Winter appeared in the New York Times on Jan. 28,
2003. The full text of the article is not available online.
However, to search for the available abstract of that article, visit
the New York Times archives, or click
here. |
Default
One might
assume that by defaulting on a student loan the balance would be frozen,
but that is not correct. In addition to continuing to accrue interest,
collection fees are tacked on to the total amount owing and a distinctly
unsavory process begins. Loan accounts are handed over to collection
agencies who begin a series of phone calls demanding repayment. Credit
agencies are notified of the default and credit ratings, if not already
damaged, are totally destroyed. Regular correspondence is issued notifying
the debtor of what is called an offset, meaning that wages can and will be
garnished, tax refunds withheld, and in at least the case of California,
lottery winnings (should the debtor be so lucky) confiscated (in the
amount owing on the loan). Even after all of this, the debtor is still not
free of the student loans.
The
primary option for post-default debtors is something called the William D.
Ford program. Although this program can set the loan holder on the course
to rehabilitation of the loan (defined in Title 20 of the U.S. Code as the
successful completion of 12 consecutive monthly payments), it is a Federal
Direct Consolidation Loan. Upon a debtor's acceptance of the terms of the
program, all interest accrued during default is capitalized, and a new
repayment schedule formulated. Payment levels may be set according to
standard or income-sensitive repayment plans, with all the negative
ramifications for the debt-holder already discussed above. A person with
insufficient income to make large monthly payments could be forced to
accept a repayment schedule lasting another twenty or thirty years, in
effect doubling or even tripling the amount originally
borrowed.
At this
point some might begin to question whether or not the tremendous amount of
interest accrual and escalating payments on these "Guaranteed Reduced
Interest Loans to Students" could be considered usury. By a legal
definition included in Section 1078 of Title 20 of the U.S. Code they
could not. Congress has specifically exempted student loan guarantee
agencies from usury laws by saying, "No provision of any law of the United
States . . . or of any State (other than a statute applicable principally
to such State's student loan insurance program) which limits the rate or
amount of interest payable on loans shall apply to a loan (1) which bears
interest (exclusive of any premium for insurance) on the unpaid principal
balance at a rate not in excess of the rate specified in this part; and
(2) which is insured (i) by the United States under this part, or (ii) by
a guaranty agency under a program covered by an agreement made pursuant to
subsection (b) of this section." What this appears to say is that
regardless of how much interest is capitalized, since the actual interest
rate used to calculate any payment is never above the legally allowed
rate, the system is not usurious.
If the
loans are not rehabilitated in the post-default period, one of the few
options left for the debtor is to file for bankruptcy. Although by
definition student loans are not dischargeable in bankruptcy, there is one
exception to this rule.
"Close-Up of Opuntia Microdasys (Mexico) at Huntington Library, San Marino, CA"
Student Loans and Bankruptcy
Under the
U.S. Bankruptcy Code, section 523 (a)(8), student loans made, insured or
guaranteed by a governmental unit are not dischargeable in bankruptcy.
However, the one exception to the general rule contained in 523(a)(8) is
in the case of "undue hardship" on the holder of the student loan or that
person's dependents. (*For a reader interested in the subject of student
loans and bankruptcy, the article "Forging Middle Ground: Revision of
Student Loan Debts in Bankruptcy as an Impetus to Amend 11 U.S.C. Section
523 (a)(8) is recommended. It can be found in 75 Iowa Law Review 733
(1990)).
Laws in
this area have changed continually in the last decade with the trend
moving toward increasingly restricting the ability of debtors to discharge
any student loan debt in bankruptcy court. Section 523 (a)(8) was first
inserted into the Bankruptcy Code as a part of the Education Amendments of
1976. According to the Iowa Law Review article cited above, p. 734, the
section was "largely a result of concerns that developed in the early
1970s about abuse of the student loan programs. The specific concern that
spawned this Code section was the need to close what critics characterized
as a 'loophole' in the student loan program. This 'loophole' allegedly
allowed graduating students to discharge their loan obligations through
bankruptcy on the eve of lucrative careers without accounting for their
ability to repay . . . While this 'loophole' concern appears to have been
more myth and media hype than reality, it stirred public emotions and
forced Congress to act."
Up until
a couple of years ago, there was also a timing element factored into
Section 523 (a)(8). A debtor had to wait a certain number of years from
the date of the first loan payment following graduation before a filing
could be made. At first it was five years, then in 1990 it was raised to
seven years. This is also where another downside of both forebearances and
consolidations came in. If a loan had been in forebearance, the length of
that forebearance would have been added to either the five or seven years
before the debtor could consider filing under Section 523 (a)(8). If loans
had been consolidated, the clock would have started anew. Say, for
example, that a debtor accepted a consolidation program five years
following graduation when the time period in the Bankruptcy Code was seven
years. If things didn't go well for the debtor, the person could not have
filed for bankruptcy two years later. Ther person would have had to have
waited another seven years from the date of
consolidation.
This
point is now moot, however. As explained on page 523-121 of the part of
Collier on Bankruptcy dealing with loan discharge, "In 1998 . . . Congress
deleted Section 523 (a)(8)(A) from the Code, leaving 'undue hardship' as
the sole basis for discharging an educational loan or benefit. The
elimination of the rule applies to all cases commenced after October 7,
1998." So what does the court define as "undue hardship?" It is difficult
to say since there is no official definition of the term. Discretion on
the matter is left up to the bankruptcy court judge hearing a particular
case. The burden of proof of undue hardship is on the debtor, but there
are several precedents in case law from which "tests" have been developed
as generally (though not universally) accepted standards.
The first
and most important test is the "Johnson" test developed from a case heard
in 1979. The following section (from Norton Bankruptcy Law and Practice
2nd, 47:52, pages 47 - 142/145), though somewhat detailed, is a good
description of the way which courts judge debt dischargeability based on
existing precedent.
"Under the first test in the
Johnson analysis, known as the 'mechanical' test, the court must determine
whether the debtor's financial resources for the forseeable future will be
insufficient to enable the debtor (and any dependents of the debtor) to
live at or above a subsistence level. Under this test, numerous factors
are examined including, but not limited to, the number of debtor's
dependents, and their ages and needs; health of the debtor and his or her
dependents; access to transportation; level of education attained by the
debtor; day-to-day living expenses; marketability of the debtor's job
skills; current income; and other sources of wealth. If the debtor fails
to meet the burden of proof under the mechanical test, the court may deny
discharge of the debt. If the debtor meets the burden, the court does not
decide whether the debt is dischargeable but proceeds to the second test
under Johnson."
The second test, 'good faith,'
is an implicit requirement to dischargeability of a student loan. Courts
have held that although the student loan debt many impose an undue
hardship on the debtor and his or her dependents, the debt will not be
discharged unless the debtor demonstrates a good faith attempt to make
payment on the loan. Further, this 'good faith' requires an examination of
such factors as the debtor's efforts to obtain and retain employment; the
debtor's present employment status; the debtor's employment record;
whether the debtor's education and skills are being used to the best
advantage; and whether the debtor and his or her dependents are living
within their means. If the debtor fails to meet the good faith test, the
court excepts the student loan debt from discharge."
If the debtor meets the 'good
faith' test, the court must engage in one final analysis, known as the
'policy' test. Under the policy test the court must determine whether a
discharge of the debt in question constitutes the type of abuse which
Congress sought to prevent by Bankruptcy Code Section 523 (a)(8). Only if
the debtor succeeds under all three tests is the debt
discharged."
"The other approaches taken to
determine whether an undue hardship exists may be summarized succinctly.
One approach follows the analysis described above but 'presumes' the loans
to be excepted from discharge and requires 'truly severe and even uniquely
difficult circumstances' to rebut the presumption. A third approach
determines hardship in terms of Federal Poverty Income Guidelines
established by the Department of Health and Human Services. Finally, some
courts look to the 'totality of circumstances' to 'manage the equities of
the case'."
"Recently the Second, Third and
Seventh Circuit Courts of Appeal have rejected the Johnson three-part test
in favor of a three-part test which deletes the 'policy test' employed in
Johnson. Under this new approach, set out by the Second Circuit's opinion
in Brunner v. New York State Higher Educational Services Corp., a finding
of 'undue hardship' requires . . . (1) that the debtor cannot maintain,
based on current income and expenses, a 'minimal' standard of living for
[himself/herself] and [his/her] dependents if forced to repay the loans;
(2) that additional circumstances exist indicating that this state of
affairs is likely to persist for a significant portion of the repayment
period of the student loans; and (3) that the debtor has made good faith
eforts to repay the loans."
The Third and Seventh Circuits
adopted the Second Circuit's approach, concluding that the Johnson 'policy
test' was inappropriate because 'the decision of whether or not to borrow
for a college education lies with the individual . . . If the leveraged
investment of an education does not generate the return the borrower
anticipated, the student, not the taxpayer, must accept the consequences
of the decision to borrow'."
As said
earlier, this undue hardship test is now the sole basis for discharging
student loan debt in bankruptcy court. For those who might think about
waiting until the statute of limitations on collecting the debt expires,
forget it. Congress repealed those in regards to student loan debt, so
there is no time limit on collecting on loan obligations when they are
due.
Conclusion
Although
the problems surrounding student loan debt have largely remained out of
the public dialogue, there are signs, like the New York Times article
cited earlier, that this might be changing. Questions need to be asked of
all parties to the transactions. Borrowers need to ask themselves if they
can do without the loans or at least accept the lowest amount possible to
get by. Schools need to ask themselves if they are doing everything
possible to keep their promises to their students or aid in placing them
in work relevant to the level and type of education received. Loan
agencies must ask themselves if they're doing everything in their power to
find reasonable and timely solutions for students who are legitimately
unable to make payments on their loans. And Congress and the courts need
to ask themselves if it is truly fair to hold student loan debt to so much
of a higher threshold than all other types of debt. It is only then that
an open and meaningful dialogue can begin on an issue so important to the
future of so many in this country.
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