By Neal McCluskey on 4.21.08 @ 12:06AM
It's nonexistent but give it time -- or as Congress already insists, give it taxpayer money.
College students have lots of "crises" -- tough classes,
relationship break-ups, homesickness, beer shortages -- most of
which are fleeting and, frankly, fatuous. One college crisis,
however, never seems to end, and while parts of it may be
overblown, Congress appears determined to keep pushing it
along.
The seemingly eternal crisis is the ever-escalating price of
higher education, and now students and parents fear the disaster
will be made even worse by the nationwide credit crunch, which
could shrink the amount of money available for student loans as
companies and investors get out of the lending business.
Last Thursday, the House of Representatives passed legislation
that would add more fuel to the fire, approving the Ensuring
Continued Access to Student Loans Act. Only a week earlier, Rep.
George Miller (D-CA), the chairman of the House Education and Labor
Committee, and ranking member Rep. Howard "Buck" McKeon (R-CA)
introduced the bill, which would put taxpayers on the hook to
finance increased student aid no matter what happens with lending
companies. Senator Teddy Kennedy (D-MA) is pushing similar
legislation in the Senate.
Yet according to a statement released by none other than Miller
himself, no students have actually reported an inability to get
federal loans. And while several large firms, including HSBC and
CIT Group, have recently stopped originating federal loans, J.P.
Morgan Chase and other companies reportedly plan to expand their
student lending operations. So while a shortfall in federal loan
funding is possible, it's far from a clear and present danger.
Whether or not the credit crunch causes a student loan shortage,
the House bill would increase yearly limits on unsubsidized federal
loans by $2,000 per borrower; allow parents holding federally
guaranteed, low-interest PLUS loans to defer payment for six months
after their children graduate; and change eligibility rules so that
parents who've been delinquent on mortgage payments for up to 180
days can qualify for PLUS.
As bad as these provisions are for the taxpayers who'll have to
finance them, the parts that kick in if lenders do fall short on
funds are even worse. The House legislation makes clear, for
instance, that if guaranty agencies operating as "lenders of last
resort" can't generate sufficient funds to finance loans
themselves, the Secretary of Education can advance them federal
dollars. In addition, the Secretary would be authorized to purchase
loans from lenders in the federal guaranteed loan program, a power
that would supposedly only apply if the purchases wouldn't "result
in any cost to the Federal Government," but how that would be
determined is unclear.
The stated intention of Miller's legislation is to protect
student loans from the nation's mortgage-centered credit squeeze.
Ultimately, though, this is just another episode in our vicious,
never-ending tuition-inflation cycle, which is driven by the
attitude that everyone should be able to go to college wherever and
whenever they want, even when others are unwilling or unable to
help them pay for it. Indeed, it's the vicious cost-escalation
cycle that has made loans increasingly important: students and
parents complain that higher education is too expensive,
vote-seeking politicians increase grant and loan aid, colleges
raise tuition to gather the new money, students and parents
complain again, and around we go.
Taxpayers bear the biggest burden of these expenditures, and
reap little to none of the educational rewards. Over the last ten
years, students' real, after-aid educational costs -- tuition,
fees, room and board -- increased approximately 24 percent at
private four-year colleges, and 35 percent at public institutions.
Federal aid furnished by taxpayers, meanwhile, increased much
faster, rising 77 percent in the last decade, from $48.7 billion to
$86.3 billion.
In light of all this, the funny thing about the as-yet
nonexistent student loan crisis is that taxpayers should actually
hope it materializes. The only way to slow the vicious
tuition-inflation cycle is to cut down on the cheap aid that fuels
it, and since politicians are going to act as if there's a crisis
no matter what, we might as well benefit from some of the market
discipline a real crisis could bring.
Neal McCluskey is associate director of the Cato Institute's Center
for Educational Freedom and author of Feds in the Classroom:
How Big Government Corrupts, Cripples, and Compromises American
Education.
topics:
Education, Business, NATO