February 07, 2008

Bankruptcy Fight on Private Student Loans re Sally Mae

Bankruptcy Fight on Private Student Loans Hotlist

Thu Feb 07, 2008 at 05:59:59 AM PST

The U.S. House of Representatives has a chance today to provide much-needed relief to low-income and minority students who have fallen victim to predatory private student loan practices by Sallie Mae and other lenders.

The U.S. House of Representatives has a chance today to provide much-needed relief to low-income and minority students who have fallen victim to predatory private student loan practices by Sallie Mae and other lenders.

House Members will vote on an amendment, sponsored by Rep. Danny Davis (D-IL), that would reverse a 2005 law making it virtually impossible for borrowers who are in financial distress to discharge private student loans in bankruptcy.

Higher Ed Watch has argued in the past for the need for this change. But as we learn more about how Sallie Mae "partnered" with giant publicly-traded, for-profit higher education companies to push high cost private loans, with interest rates and fees exceeding 20 percent, on high-risk borrowers with poor credit, we are even more convinced that Congress has a moral obligation to act.

For most unsecured debt, a borrower who runs into difficulty can file for Chapter 7 liquidation or Chapter 13 reorganization, so a judge can sort out the appropriate treatment of various loans. But there is a short list of debts that the law subjects to a different status, allowing discharge in only the most extreme circumstances. The government, for example, makes it especially difficult for people to escape child support responsibilities, overdue taxes, and criminal fines.

Federal student loans also can't be discharged. There's at least some justification for providing federal student loans that status since they are backed by taxpayer dollars and come with borrower protections in cases of economic hardship, unemployment, death and disability. But there is no good reason for private student loans to be accorded the harshest bankruptcy status given to criminal fines, child support, and back taxes.

To be clear, we're not advocating allowing borrowers to claim bankruptcy willy nilly in order to avoid student loan repayment. Our view is that private student loans should not be treated any differently than other forms of consumer debt when it comes to bankruptcy. Right now they are, and that's wrong. People who borrow private student loans are trying to better their lives. They should not be treated more harshly than those who rack up credit card debt at the mall.

Shielding private loans from bankruptcy in almost all circumstances means that repayment demands extend essentially forever, leaving even the most destitute borrowers with no way out. And bankruptcy exemption makes private student loan providers less cautious about peddling high cost loans to low-income students who might never to repay them. In other words, it promotes the kind of subprime lending that Sallie Mae was engaged in at some of the most scandal-ridden chains of for-profit colleges. Treating private student loans like other forms of unsecured debt would at least cause lenders to think twice before providing high-interest loans to people who they know will have trouble paying them back.

The Davis amendment takes a responsible approach to helping financially-distressed borrowers. Under the measure, private loans would not become dischargeable until five years after they come due. The five year wait protects lenders from a loan being discharged before a borrower has had an opportunity to reap financial benefits from his or her education.

In addition, after the five years, borrowers wishing to have their private loans erased would still have to meet a strict means test that Congress set up as part of the 2005 law to prevent consumers from abusing bankruptcy laws by trying to escape debt they can afford to repay.

To read more, about lender opposition and the response, please visit www.HigherEdWatch.org


Tags: Bankruptcy, Subprime, Education, Students, Colleges and Universities, Congress (all tags) :: Previous Tag Versions


1 comment:

SalesPerson said...

The College Loan Corporation, the eighth largest originator of federally guaranteed student loans, announced today that it would halt making loans in the federal program on March 1.

----------------------------------
www.StudentLoansBlog.biz

Studentloansblog.biz

ShareThis