Ivy Love
Senior Policy Analyst, Center on Education & Labor
In our first , we looked at how the National Association of Student Financial Aid Administrators’ recent聽 proposes timing and using data retrieval to complete the FAFSA. This post will examine another recommendation in NASFAA鈥檚 proposal dealing with how applicants are sorted into three 鈥減aths鈥 and what that means for simplifying the FAFSA.
Path one uses a simple screening question to drastically simplify the FAFSA for very low-income families. Under NASFAA鈥檚 proposal, families and students who receive benefits from either the Federal Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP — commonly referred to as 鈥渇ood stamps鈥) or Supplemental Security Income (SSI) would be automatically eligible for the maximum Pell Grant. That鈥檚 it. They would only need to sign their name, jot down colleges they鈥檙e interested in attending, and submit the form. We agree with NASFAA that qualifying for those benefits says enough about the applicant鈥檚 resources to reasonably conclude they should receive the full Pell Grant.
For comparison, the current FAFSA asks applicants whether anyone in their household is receiving any federal means-tested benefits, not just SNAP or SSI, but questions don鈥檛 quite stop there. If the applicant answers yes, they will automatically have an Expected Family Contribution (EFC) of 0, but only if their income is also below $24,000. But a family of four could still qualify for SNAP benefits with income over $24,000 per year, so NASFAA鈥檚 way of sorting applicants based on benefits would make things simpler, since they would ask no further questions about income for applicants who get SNAP or SSI.
And the FAFSA would only be a little longer for those who don鈥檛 get SNAP or SSI benefits but also don鈥檛 earn to file taxes. These applicants would only enter information about income from employment and child support. In its proposal, NASFAA chose to include child support because this is the most significant source of untaxed income for families. They assume non tax filers aren鈥檛 likely to have significant amounts of other income or assets available to pay for college, so non tax filers could wrap up their FAFSA application here. That means non tax filers who don鈥檛 get SSI or SNAP wouldn鈥檛 automatically get the full Pell Grant, but NASFAA鈥檚 proposal would keep the financial aid application process simple for them.
If the applicant didn鈥檛 qualify for designated benefits and filed taxes, they would be directed either to path two or path three based on the complexity of their financial situation. NASFAA鈥檚 proposal closely resembles Gates鈥 here, because it also uses schedules to sort students into two groups. If a student or his family did not bring in income from a farm, business, real estate or capital gains and therefore didn鈥檛 have to submit a separate tax schedule when they filed their taxes, they would go to path two, meaning they would only answer additional questions about income earned from work and cash assets.
However, NASFAA only recommends capturing the cash assets of path two applicants who are dependents or independent students without dependents. That means parents of dependent students who don鈥檛 file schedules won鈥檛 have to report their cash assets at all. In contrast, Gates鈥 says dependents aren鈥檛 likely to have sizeable assets, so it鈥檚 not worth the trouble to ask about any of their assets, cash or otherwise. Yet, some financial aid administrators think this will give an unfair advantage to the small number of dependents with high assets, and they are concerned those resources will be overlooked, creating an aid package for those students that doesn鈥檛 reflect their true situation. For example, if dependents鈥 assets weren鈥檛 assessed, a parent could slip their high school senior tens of thousands of dollars and make it look like the family was financially weaker than they really were to try to get more need-based aid. NASFAA is right to be concerned about that. But on the other hand, asking about the cash assets of a high school senior who saved up money from his part-time job to pay for college but not his parents, who both make good money but don鈥檛 file tax schedules, doesn鈥檛 make sense either.
Applicants who do have tax schedules would follow NASFAA鈥檚 path three. Since filing tax schedules signals that a family has significant financial resources, all applicants – regardless of dependent status – would answer questions about cash and other assets. In another effort to prevent gaming the system, NASFAA wouldn鈥檛 let applicants carry over any losses declared on tax schedules to the FAFSA. If a family reported a business loss one year but still had hefty wage and investment income, those gains and losses wouldn鈥檛 cancel each other out, as NASFAA thinks a family with high resources and multiple sources of income is still relatively financially strong, even with occasional losses.聽
NASFAA鈥檚 report makes a few important contributions to the discussion around simplifying the FAFSA, but some recommendations may benefit from additional research. Dramatically simplifying the process for those already eligible for other federal benefits and then further sorting students based on the complexity of their financial situation makes good sense. However, better data around which assets matter most and how to incorporate that information could lead to further simplification. NASFAA made clear in their report that they鈥檙e willing to modify their recommendations if doing so would benefit students and families. And while the various proposals to reform the FAFSA might disagree about how to go about it, wanting students to have a well-marked, straightforward path through the FAFSA is driving this policy discussion.”