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Lender bending

It’s time to rein in the student-loan industry. Plus, trying to make sense of the horror at Virginia Tech.
By EDITORIAL  |  April 18, 2007

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It should come as little surprise that financial institutions resort to heavy-handed and ethically shady tactics to increase their share of the student-loan business. After all, the industry is a nest of crony capitalism, occupied by well-connected lobbyists, the pols they feed, and obscenely compensated CEOs. It should shock and appall us, however, to learn that some colleges and universities have played along. And that is what we have been learning, thanks to aggressive inquiries by New York attorney general Andrew Cuomo and the office of Senator Ted Kennedy.

The revelations should also shock and appall higher-education administrators. Their deafening silence — particularly noticeable here in the Boston area, home to more than 50 colleges and universities and close to 400,000 students — confirms that self-policing is not the answer. Massachusetts attorney general Martha Coakley should pick up on the work of Cuomo, as attorneys general already have in Minnesota, Illinois, and Ohio. Coakley should demand to know which of our state’s schools have been taking kickbacks to steer their students to predatory loan companies.

In doing so, such colleges are serving as de facto sales generators for private lenders, such as Sallie Mae, Nelnet, and Citibank, by placing those companies on a short list of “preferred lenders” for students. Students and their families almost always rely on those recommendations, trusting their schools to steer them away from predators.

By law, private lenders are not allowed to offer inducements to schools, but that has not stopped them from doing so. Cuomo has charged one lender with offering kickbacks to as many as 60 schools, including Boston University and five others in Massachusetts. One loan company paid a school’s financial-aid director $13,000 as a consultant, the New York Times recently reported, and other lending institutions have placed high-ranking university officials on their boards of directors. School administrators have been found to hold stock in lending companies. Other incentives and payoffs have been alleged.

Lenders have also “induced” schools to stop participating in the federal direct-loan program, established by Bill Clinton to compete with the avaricious companies and keep interest rates to a fair level. Sallie Mae, the largest private student lender, has offered millions in special loan funds to schools that leave the federal program, the Times reported.

The bank-friendly Bush administration’s Department of Education has refused to investigate these improprieties, and has not even issued guidelines of what inducements it considers legal and illegal. Bush’s professed “reforms” of the industry turned out to include $1 billion of proposed cuts in federal student aid. Attempts in the US Senate to pass a “Student Borrower Bill of Rights”, among other legislation to regulate the industry, are still in limbo.

Some schools justify their selection of “preferred lenders,” and their rebuffing of the federal direct-loan program, by arguing that they are bargaining for preferable interest rates for their students.

But as we’ve learned in spades from the home-mortgage industry, predatory lending isn’t just about the interest rate. The Phoenix reported more than three years ago that Sallie Mae charges excessive and undisclosed late fees, applies aggressive collection tactics, and is unresponsive to complaints (see “Sallie Mae Not”). Congressional committees that oversee banking regulation — notably, that chaired by Massachusetts representative Barney Frank since the midterm elections — have yet to show serious interest in reining in the excesses of the personal-finance industry as a whole. To give student borrowers relief, banking reform also should be undertaken with all due speed, in tandem with the work of Cuomo and company.

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Related: School for scandal, The morning after, Carcieri’s challenges, More more >
  Topics: The Editorial Page , Business, Education, Boston University,  More more >
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Re: Lender bending
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The third and last U.S. Presidential Debate took place in Hempstead, New York on October 14, 2008. Senator Barack Obama of Illinois took off running with an eight-point lead, according to an average of national polls as collected by CNN. Sen. John McCain of Arizona took advantage of Obama’s unruffled carriage and laid the younger candidate’s policies, judgment and qualities of character out on the table. McCain quickly pointed out that he was “not President Bush” as soon as Obama responded with a more critical stance regarding the economic policies of the past eight years. McCain stated that he would enact an “across the board spending freeze,” chop off some programs and get rid of the remaining once the dust settled. On the other hand, Obama presented a more conservative stance about the issue. He would “go through the federal budget page by page, line by line” in order to close programs that aren’t working as they should be. Both candidates declare to bring a resolution to America and its decreasing economy. However, will it leave consumers with the ability to choose where or when to have access to payday loans? That remains unclear. Just because it is said that Americans are living in “the land of the free” doesn’t mean that interest groups (i.e. banks and credit unions) are of the same mind to have the freedom to choose.

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By paydayloan on 10/22/2008 at 4:54:04

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