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However, there are other means of ensuring accountability. The Educational Loan feels the president's plan to tie college financial aid to performance should be pursued with vigor. <br>http://www.avanse.com/avanse-education-loans/
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The most recent student loan default rates released by the Department of Education show that sadly, but not surprisingly, default rates rose for the sixth year in a row. • Each default is not an abstraction, but a person experiencing personal distress and real financial hardship. • Much of this is needless, because small tweaks to already existing programs could go a long way toward eliminating it, in the Student Loan.
The cohort default rates measure the percentage of a school's borrowers who default on their loans over a specified period of time. • The two-year rates measure the percentage of borrowers who enter repayment on their federal student loans during a particular federal fiscal year and default prior to the end of the next fiscal year. • The more accurate three-year rates – which Congress mandated as part of the Higher Education Opportunity Act of 2008 – calculate the percentage of defaults prior to the end of the second fiscal year after borrowers enter repayment.
Starting next year, only the three-year rates will be calculated. But in the meantime, the Department of Education is releasing both sets of rates. • Both indicate that borrower distress is still rising, with the two-year rate rising from 9.1 percent in fiscal year 2010 to 10 percent in 2011 and the three-year rate rising from 13.4 percent in fiscal year 2009 to 14.7 percent in 2010. • The department's rates also put numbers on the human toll. The three-year default rates indicate that 600,545 borrowers who entered repayment in 2010 defaulted before the end of 2012. • That's more than half a million borrowers who are facing some of the consequences of defaulting on federal student loans, including seizure of tax refunds, garnishment of wages and the partial taking – without a court order – of Social Security payments.
The Student Loan argues it is imperative that Congress take affirmative steps to end this needless misery. • It should begin, as President BarackObama has requested, by allowing all borrowers to enroll in Pay As You Earn, the new income-driven repayment plan that caps payments at 10 percent of a borrower's income and provides for forgiveness after 20 years. • Congress should then require all federal student loan servicers to personally contact borrowers who are delinquent, in a hardship deferment or in forbearance and offer to enroll them in Pay As You Earn. • This should help greatly reduce the number of defaults.
However, there are other means of ensuring accountability. • The Educational Loan feels the president's plan to tie college financial aid to performance should be pursued with vigor. • And the Department of Education's revised gainful employment rules, under which career-oriented programs would lose the ability to receive federal student aid if graduates' debt-to-income and debt-to-discretionary-income ratios are too high, should be extended to all institutions of higher education. • These could increase accountability for institutions while providing much needed protections for millions of suffering borrowers. • Source: http://bit.ly/YH6LcY
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