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Student Loan Subsidies Could Have Dangerous, Unintended Side Effects

  • September 18, 2022
  • Business

Andrea Smiley, a spokeswoman for the University of Phoenix, said the school was “proud of all of our one million graduates, and we employ several student support initiatives, including a tuition price guarantee, academic and career coaches, career services for life, and 24/7 online support, among other efforts.”

She added that the school “adamantly” disagreed with any implication that it has ever acted improperly. The University of Phoenix did not comment on the Biden administration’s loan cancellation plan.

Experts say Mr. Biden’s new plan could increase schools’ incentives to saddle students with unreasonable amounts of debt.

“Debt cancellation and income-driven repayment can’t stand alone,” said Sarah Sattelmeyer, a higher-education project director at the think tank New America. “We need to pair these things with a really strong accountability structure.”

Past efforts to rein in poorly performing institutions have been derailed by lobbying, litigation and shifting political tides. The government’s most forceful hammer — a regulation put in place during the Obama administration known as the “gainful employment” rule, which threatened to cut off federal aid funds to for-profit schools whose students earned too little to pay off their loans — was scrapped in 2019 by Betsy DeVos, the education secretary under President Donald J. Trump.

The new subsidies could also make students less cautious about taking on high debt. The Education Department has not yet published the details of Mr. Biden’s new repayment plan, but the outline the president described last month could transform higher-education financing, especially for undergraduate degrees, by shifting more of the costs from borrowers to taxpayers.

Article source: https://www.nytimes.com/2022/09/18/business/biden-loans-for-profit-colleges.html

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