Higher Ed Roundup: Week of September 8 – September 12
No Loan Crisis Here, Report New England Colleges
Sen. Grassley Requests New IRS 990 Form for Colleges
Survey Reveals How Families Pay for College
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No Loan Crisis Here, Report New England Colleges
Fears that there would be a major breakdown in federal student loan availability have been greatly exagerrated, according to a new report by the . In a , the board found that the vast majority of colleges and universities in New England aren’t experiencing any major problems obtaining loans for their students. 40 percent of colleges reported that the Ensuring Continued Access to Student Loans Act of May 2008 had a “favorable impact” on loan availability, while 44 percent reported the legislation had “no impact,” primarily because they were not experiencing any problems accessings loans to begin with. The board noted that students are overwhelmingly taking advantage of the increase in borrowing limits that Congress approved as part of that legislation. In addition, there has been a substantial increase in applications for PLUS loans for parents, as high cost private student loans become harder to obtain. While colleges expressed some concern about the tightening of lending standards by private loan providers, the report concluded that “instances in which students have not been able to attend college due to inadequte loan availability are exceptional.”
Sen. Grassley Requests New IRS 990 Form for Colleges
A year after used by colleges and other nonprofits, Sen. Charles Grassley of Iowa, the ranking Republican on the Senate Finance Committee, now specifically for colleges. Speaking at a on Monday on college endowments, Grassley said that the . Last December, the IRS revealed a for nonprofits that will go into effect for the 2008 tax year that requires schools to report the value of their endowments. According to Grassley, the new form doesn’t go far enough. “While the new 990 requests some information about endowments, it does not require institutions to report information about their student populations or costs,” he stated.
Survey Reveals How Families Pay for College
Nearly 40 percent of college tuition bills are financed by loans taken out by both students and their parents, while 32 percent of college costs are met by parental contributions, 15 percent by grants and scholarships, and 10 percent by student financial contributions. A , “How America Pays for College,” commissioned by Sallie Mae and conducted by Gallup, also finds that 14 percent of families surveyed to pay for college, 9 percent tapped a college savings account (such as a 529 plan), and 12 percent received money from relatives or friends. Of the 23 percent of costs paid for by student borrowing, more than half came from federal loans and about 20 percent came from private loans. Parents were , with only about 3 percent reporting that they had taken out federal PLUS loans.