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Footing the tuition bill : the new student loan sector / edited by Frederick M. Hess.
Van Pelt Library LB2340.2 .F64 2007
By Request
- Format:
- Book
- Language:
- English
- Subjects (All):
- Student loans--United States.
- Student loans.
- Student financial aid administration--United States.
- Student financial aid administration.
- United States.
- Physical Description:
- xii, 309 pages : illustrations ; 23 cm
- Place of Publication:
- Washington, D.C. : AEI Press, 2007.
- Summary:
- A college degree is the key to opportunity and economic success in America today, a fact that has brought new attention to questions of college access and affordability. Rising college costs and low levels of household savings mean that existing federal loan and grant programs cannot meet the needs of many students. The search for additional funds has spurred explosive growth in private, "nontraditional" student loans. The private student loan market, which was only an afterthought fifteen years ago, today accounts for 18 percent of all loans for postsecondary education. Although much attention is paid to federal loan and grant programs, this emergent sector has largely escaped careful scholarly analysis.
- The growth of the private loan market provides an opportunity to reexamine a system of federal student aid that was designed in the 1960s and early 1970s, an era when colleges and credit markets looked very different than they do today. Footing the Tuition Bill explores fundamental questions about the purposes of federal student loans, how well traditional arrangements and gatekeepers work in the modern era, and how innovations might offer guidance for rethinking the design of financial aid. This collection of pioneering studies examines why the private postsecondary lending market has emerged, what it looks like, how it works, and the possibilities and tensions it poses for the future efforts to ensure that the doors of college are open to all Americans.
- Contents:
- The Federal Loan Landscape 7
- A Quick Guide to Key Actors 9
- An Anachronistic System? 12
- Overview of the Volume 15
- 1 Higher Education's Student Financial Aid Enterprise in Historical Perspective / John R. Thelin 19
- Principles and Precedents: The Historic Roots of Financial Aid 20
- The Principles and Pilot of the 1944 GI Bill 22
- The 1947 Truman Commission Report: Access and Affordability 24
- Some Landmark Developments of the Past Half-Century 26
- The High Tide of Federal Student Financial Aid Programs: The 1972 Reauthorization of the Higher Education Act 28
- Readjustments of Federal Student Aid Programs, 1978-90 34
- Closing the "Tuition Gap" in Statewide Higher Education Planning: State Scholarships and Independent Colleges 35
- Recent Trends 37
- Conclusion: Connecting Past and Present in Policy Analysis 40
- 2 Opportunity Costs: The Politics of Federal Student Loans / Andrew Rudalevige 42
- Federal Student Loans: Actors, Organizations, and Issues 45
- Institutions of Higher Education 46
- Students 50
- Lenders and Guarantors 52
- The Higher Education Act, Forty Years On 59
- The Path (Dependence) Ahead 68
- Muddling Through 69
- Fiscalization and Polarization 70
- 3 Private Lending and Student Borrowing: A Primer / Christopher Mazzeo 74
- Defining Private Loans 76
- Profiling the Private Loan Industry 79
- Understanding the Growth of Private Loans 83
- Loan Limits and Rising Tuition 84
- College Choice 86
- Who Are Private Borrowers? 89
- Recommendations for Federal and State Policymakers 91
- 4 The Demand Side of Student Loans: The Changing Face of Borrowers / Bridget Terry Long, Erin K. Riley 99
- College Loan Programs: The Supply Side 103
- The Evolution of Federal Student Loan Programs 103
- Current Federal Student Loan Programs 103
- State and Institutional Loan Programs 107
- Private Loan Options for Students 107
- College Loans for Parents and Other Loan Options 108
- The Characteristics of Borrowers 109
- Borrowers by Attendance Pattern 110
- Loan Demand by Type of institution 114
- Borrowers by Income and Dependency 118
- Borrowers by Race or Ethnicity 125
- Concerns about Student Loans: Too Much or Not Enough Debt? 126
- Trends in Cumulative Debt 126
- Measuring the Burden of Debt 128
- Too Much Debt? Concerns about the Effect of Debt Burden 130
- The Loan Limit Debate 132
- Not Enough Debt? The (Un)Willingness to Take Out Loans 133
- Debt and College Dropouts 133
- 5 The Supply Side of Student Loans: How Global Capital Markets Fuel the Student Loan Industry / Joseph Keeney 136
- Student Loan Volume and Growth 137
- The Student Loan Industry 138
- Key Metrics: The Art and Science of Loan Losses 140
- Key Metrics: Loan Value 143
- Student Loan ABSs: A New and Rapidly Growing Asset Class 145
- Student Loan ABS Investors 147
- The Nuts and Bolts of Student Loan Securitization 149
- Market Risks and Opportunities 150
- Disclosure and Compliance 153
- International Student Loan Market 154
- 6 Marketing Opportunity: Challenges and Dilemmas / Richard Lee Colvin 157
- Sallie Mae: "We're Big and We're Competitive" 165
- First Marblehead: Behind-the-Scenes Giant 170
- Banks and Private Loans 174
- Consolidators: A New Kind of Business 175
- MyRichUncle 176
- Questions Raised 180
- 7 The End of Autonomy: How the Role of the Financial Aid Office Is Changing / Alan Greenblatt 182
- An Accidental Profession 184
- An Era of Free Agency 188
- Losing Clout 190
- Going Private 191
- What's Best for Students 194
- Interactions with the Loan Industry 196
- Access and Influence 200
- 8 Thoughts on the Industry's Past and Present: An Insider's Perspective / Richard George 203
- The Perspective 204
- A Brief Outline of Context 205
- Concentration 205
- Integration 206
- Securitization 207
- Consolidation 207
- Private or Alternative Loans 208
- An Alternative Path 211
- A Necessary Reform 215
- 9 Projections for the Student Loan Industry / William D. Hansen 223
- Federal Financial Aid Overview: Grants and Loans 223
- Alternative Market Mechanisms 226
- Impact of the Deficit Reduction Act 230
- New Policies and Needed Reform 232
- Growth in Alternative Student Loans 237
- Considerations for the Future 240
- Proposal #1 Repeal Tax Benefits and Increase Support for Pell Grants 241
- Proposal #2 Privatize the Perkins Loan Program 243
- Proposal #3 Auction the FDLP Portfolio 244
- Proposal #4 Private Philanthropy 246
- Appendix A Key Developments in the Federal Loan Sector 251
- Appendix B Commonly Used Abbreviations and Acronyms 257.
- Notes:
- Conference at the American Enterprise Institute.
- Includes bibliographical references and index.
- ISBN:
- 9780844742533
- 0844742538
- OCLC:
- 122973919
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