In response to scandals rocking the student loan
industry, the House has quickly passed reform legislation to require more
disclosure from lenders as well as university codes of conduct, and Senate
action is expected. But the larger issues of rising college costs and students’
increasing dependence on private loans have, for the moment at least, taken a
back seat.
Yet that doesn’t mean they’ve gone away. College
costs have risen far faster than inflation and also outpaced the growth of grant
aid and federal loans. Pell grants, for example, which provide money to
low-income students, covered nearly 60 percent of the cost of attending a public
four-year school in 1986, but by 2005, their value had dropped to 33 percent of
the cost, according to the College Board. As a result, more students must turn
to costly private loans to finance their education or not go at all.
The cost of information technology, the increasing salaries of tenured
professors, and even federal loans themselves have all been blamed for college
tuition hikes. On the last point, an analysis by the Cato Institute suggests
that when aid is provided by the federal government, states and universities
reduce their own efforts to make college affordable.
Whatever
the causes, the Advisory Committee on Student Financial Assistance, an
independent committee created by Congress, estimates that 400,000 students who
are qualified to attend a four-year college don’t do so each year because of
financial restrictions. The committee estimates that roughly 40 percent of this
group does not attend college at all, which significantly limits future
earnings. Many students who do go to college face daunting piles of debt. The
College Board estimates that the median debt level of bachelor’s degree
recipients was $19,300 in the 2003-04 school year.
In his
fiscal 2008 budget, President Bush proposed increasing the maximum Pell grant
award to $5,400 by 2012 from $4,050 today, a change he would pay for with cuts
in other loan programs. Even though the scandals are dominating most of
the current discussions on Capitol Hill, some education experts praise the fact
that student loans are getting any attention at all. Stephen Burd, a senior
research fellow at the New America Foundation, says, "This is the first
time everyone is dealing with the reality of the fact that private loans have
become essential financing for undergraduates." The reform legislation might result in
A. more expensive educational costs.
B. the boom of loan industry.
C. more transparent loans.
D. the depression of private loans.