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In Short

Asset Building News Week – July 22, 2016

Highlights from this week's news stories

student debt
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Featured Story: The State of Student Debt

On Tuesday, the White House released a on the student debt crisis entitled, 鈥淚nvesting in Higher Education: Benefits, Challenges, and the State of Student Debt.鈥 The report covers many aspects related to higher education and student debt, but most reactions have been related to its impact on the economy and how repayment differs between those who graduated and those who did not.

鈥淭he people having the hardest time repaying their student loans are not graduates with six-figure debt, rather they are borrowers who took out a fraction of that amount, attended for-profit or community colleges, and never earned a degree,鈥 writes for the Washington Post. Douglas explains that according to the report, nearly 60 percent of borrowers owe less than $20,000 in undergraduate debt, which conflicts with the common narrative of a majority of college graduates with massive amounts of student debt. However, this figure does include those who attended but did not finish college, which raises a different question: How is this group doing when it comes to repaying their debt? The answer is not good.

The 础迟濒补苍迟颈肠鈥檚 explains. 鈥淸D]eclining state support for public college fed the rise of for-profit schools, many of which served as factories for dropouts with relatively small amounts of outstanding student debt. These are the people most at risk of default鈥攏ot the college graduates with $100,000 loan burdens, but rather low-income students who took on a few thousand dollars in debt and didn鈥檛 even get a degree.鈥 According to the report, those with under $5,000 in student debt are eight times more likely to default on loans compared to someone with $40,000+ in student loans, and out of all of the defaults on student loans, two-thirds are on loans under $10,000. While the Obama Administration has taken steps to decrease the number of defaults by providing more income-based repayment plans, those in low-wage jobs still struggle.

, also with The Atlantic, explores the role employers sometimes pay in student loans鈥攁nd how those who need the assistance most often do not get it. Employer assistance, 鈥渢end[s] to come in one of three forms,鈥 White writes, 鈥渢uition assistance…, student-loan payment assistance…, and consolidation and refinancing opportunities.鈥 SoFi, a lender that helps borrowers refinance their student loans, markets itself to companies like IBM and Kronos who will (and do) include information on SoFi refinancing to its employees. This is great, but as White points out, these workers would likely be able to pay off their debt without any assistance. It鈥檚 the borrowers that Thompson profiled, who graduated with minimal debt and no degree鈥攁nd who are typically not working for businesses that offer student debt assistance鈥攖hat are more likely to default.

国产视频鈥檚 Higher Education Initiative has done a lot of work surrounding the nature of student debt and those who default. 聽

News Highlights: Universal Basic Income and Food Stamps

Dylan Matthews, a regular commentator on universal basic income (UBI), remarks in a Vox piece that it was 鈥渟omewhat jarring鈥 when Robert Greenstein, president of the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, came out against UBI. Matthews interviewed Greenstein to uncover why an advocate for increased assistance programs for the poor like Greenstein would argue 鈥渢hat using basic income to replace the safety net would actually increase poverty.鈥 Greenstein says that universal programs are not necessarily stronger than means-tested programs, since means-tested programs have recently made gains, likely due to their lower cost and thus greater political viability. Greenstein tells Matthews that he is skeptical of UBI because of US political culture; he worries about 鈥済etting cash to people who aren’t working and have no work record,鈥 a population with little political support, as he thinks that they would likely be excluded from a UBI. He instead points to policy proposals like a universal child tax credit, which would be an expansion of a program the US already has. 鈥淧rogress in the US basically does occur incrementally,鈥 says Greenstein.

The U.S. economy, while not great, is doing better than it was during the Great Recession. 鈥淎nd yet, when it comes to the number of Americans who go hungry, it鈥檚 almost like the recovery never happened,鈥 writes The 础迟濒补苍迟颈肠鈥檚 Ned Resnikoff. The number of food insecure households spiked during the recession and it has barely gone down since. Why is that? Resnikoff points to the recently reintroduced work requirements for able-bodied adults without dependents (ABAWDs). 鈥淯nder federal law, ABAWDs can only receive three months鈥 worth of SNAP benefits every three years before they get cut off. In order to receive any more, they must either find employment or enter a job training program that meets federal requirements.鈥

News in Brief: Minimum Wage, the Wealth Gap, Mortgage Lending, and More

  • Five years ago, 鈥淐ongress created the as the only federal agency with the sole mission of protecting consumers in the financial marketplace.鈥 Happy 5th Anniversary, CFPB!
  • reports in the Washington Post that the official Republican Party platform unexpectedly calls for the restoration of the 鈥淕lass-Steagall鈥 law. The platform also calls for significant curbs to the power and independence of the CFPB.
  • According to a report from , Oregon’s Retirement Savings Board outlined key features of the state’s forthcoming Oregon Retirement Savings Plan. The ORSP is expected to begin enrolling workers in July 2017 into a plan that is based on Roth IRA and defaults to a 5 percent contribution level invested in age-based funds. The plan will first be available to larger employers and phased in to cover smaller employers over several years.
  • Many companies have announced minimum wage increases in the last few weeks. Is this a growing movement or a moment? The 础迟濒补苍迟颈肠鈥檚 reports.
  • Writing for the New York Times, discusses decluttering and the minimalist movement and how 鈥淸f]or people who are not so well off, the idea of opting to have even less is not really an option.鈥
  • The intergenerational wealth gap isn鈥檛 just an American thing鈥攊t happens in the United Kingdom too. The 骋耻补谤诲颈补苍鈥檚 reports.
  • A new survey from the Indexed Annuity Leadership Council reveals that 25 percent of Americans are worried that they will outlive their retirement savings, writes for the Washington Post.
  • with the New York Times writes on a new from the National Community Reinvestment Coalition. According to the report, race is an important factor in deciding where banks lend, more specifically, 鈥渂anks made fewer loans to middle- and lower-income borrowers in minority neighborhoods than to borrowers with similar incomes in white neighborhoods.鈥
  • writes in the Baltimore Sun that 45 percent is an important number when discussing inequality. This is because 鈥45 percent of employed workers are paid less than $15 per hour,鈥 鈥渃lose to 44 percent of Americans are 鈥榓sset poor,鈥欌 鈥45 percent of private-sector workers do not have access to an employer-provided 401(k),鈥 and the same percentage of people receive no paid sick leave, have young children but can鈥檛 afford them preschool, and have no equity in a home. 鈥淭hese aren鈥檛 the same people,鈥 but Yarrow reminds us that these are 鈥渓argely overlapping populations.鈥

More 国产视频 the Authors

Kalena Thomave
Kalena Thomhave

Emerson National Hunger Fellow, Family-Centered Social Policy Program

Sade Bruce

Programs/Projects/Initiatives

Asset Building News Week – July 22, 2016