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Student loans: subsidizing bankers, or students?

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The following post is the second written by James Kvaal, a student at Harvard Law School (see the first post here).  Immediately before entering law school, he was a senior policy advisor to Sen. John Edwards.  He has also worked as a policy advisor in the Clinton White House, at the U.S. Department of Education, and for Congressman George Miller.


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A new Fortune article provides more evidence that federal student loans do more to subsidize banks than help students, as previously described in these pages.  


Fortune reports that Sallie Mae - the King Kong of the student loan industry - has seen its stock has increase by 1900 percent over the last decade.  That's more than eight times faster than the S&P 500.  Sallie Mae was recently rated the most profitable bank in the world by the Boston Consulting Group, considering both returns and risk.

Salle Mae executives have rewarded themselves richly.  Two took home a combined $370 million over the past five years, according to Fortune.  One is now trying to buy the Washington Nationals (whose highest-paid player earns a mere $8 million).


Obviously, student loans need to be profitable or else banks won't make them.  But massive profits like these--including personal fortunes out of the Gilded Age--are a good sign that the highly regulated program is overcharging students and overpaying lenders.  


Congress took a good first step by cutting some lender subsidies in its budget.  Specifically, it eliminates extra payments to lenders in times of falling interest rates and for using tax-exempt financing.  But the budget retains the same essential subsidy scheme.


Student loans need fundamental reform to put students--not banks--first.  For example, we could reduce subsidies by creating competition among lenders, as John Kerry once proposed.  Alternatively, we could expand the Education Department's much cheaper direct student loan program.  Either way, excessive lender subsidies could be redirected to scholarships and more affordable student loans.


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This is old news.  Since 1994 the Repugs have sold out students and shoveled money to their lender-backers.

Why haven't the Democrats told every college student in the country how and why Repugs are ripping them off?  One direct mailing a year could make students Democrats for life.

Very old news.  Don't forget, the Republican party is not really a unitary group, it is made of an artificial marraige between Rich people who want the government to leave their money alone, the Fundamentalist Right who was driven into the Republican party by  Democratic intolerance, and  BANKER REPUBLICANS.  You are talking about a program that is dear to the heart of BANKER Republicans.

Don't ignore the fact that Congress just basically outlawed refinancing student loans, so now students can't get the benefit of a lower interest rate.  Talk about eliminating competition!

I think the only way student borrowers can hope to make it through college today would be to simultaneously borrow from and invent in Sallie Mae. 

oops....i meant "invest" not "invent"

My name is Kellie

I am a volunteer for HelpaStudent.com

We are a group of students who created a site www.helpastudent.com Our goal is to collect 1 million dollars before the end of the current semester and give the money out to students who are in desperate financial need.

Participating students post their stories and visitors to the site get to choose who gets to win the money. Please support us by mentioning our site to your readers. Students who visit your site are very good candidates to come up with fun and creative stories!

Thank you

Kellie at helpastudent.com

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