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President Obama鈥檚 Biggest Higher Ed Misses

With the presidential election fast approaching, we are taking a closer look at President Obama鈥檚 higher education record. Yesterday, we highlighted the administration鈥檚 in this area. Today, we are examining the administration鈥檚 most significant blunders and missed opportunities.

So without further ado, here are the Obama administration鈥檚 biggest higher ed misses:

1. Fighting to Keep the 3.4% Interest Rate: Eager to woo the youth vote and tap into America鈥檚 anxiety about student debt, the Obama administration launched an all-out 鈥渄on鈥檛 double my rate鈥 earlier this year aimed at stopping Congress from allowing the temporary 3.4 percent fixed interest rate on federally-subsidized Stafford loans to revert to 6.8 percent. Not wanting to be on the wrong side of this popular issue during an election year, Republicans and Democrats lawmakers made national headlines for their bipartisan efforts to maintain the lower rate. Largely left out of this debate, however, was any acknowledgement of how of this fix would be: after all, it only extended the 3.4 rate for another year, only applied to a subset of new borrowers (those who qualify for subsidized Stafford loans), and only would save eligible borrowers about $9 a month. And it cost the government $6 billion. With the Pell Grant program facing a multi-billion dollar funding cliff, it鈥檚 a shame that the administration spent so much political and financial capital on a one-year gimmick that provided neither meaningful relief to financially-distressed borrowers in the short term nor to the Pell Grant program over the long haul.

2. Sacrificing Non-Traditional Students in the Pell Grant Budget-Cutting Game: While the Obama administration admirably fought to increase and then maintain the maximum Pell Grant, it also agreed to reduce the program鈥檚 budget by making eligibility changes that disproportionately affected non-traditional, working, adult students. These eligibility changes included eliminating financial aid for students without a high school diploma who could show that they have an ; retroactively limiting the number of semesters a student could receive Pell from 18 to 12, which who previously stopped out and are now looking to finish their degrees; and which many community college students used to take summer courses. The administration has repeatedly said that community college students and adult students are critical to meeting the President鈥檚 2020 completion goals, so it was disappointing to see the administration and Congress try to balance the Pell Grant program’s budget on the backs of these students (while they found the political will to spend $6 billion on a one-year student loan interest rate freeze that won鈥檛 provide meaningful relief to borrowers).

3. Caving on Gainful Employment: While the Obama administration deserves much credit for its effort to rein in for-profit colleges, it also deserves to be blasted for by taking the teeth out of its final Gainful Employment rules. Responding to a massive lobbying campaign from the for-profit higher education industry, the administration to such an extent that these regulations 鈥 which were meant to shut down programs that load students up with unmanageable levels of debt but provide inadequate training 鈥 make even the most poorly-performing for-profit college companies . In July, a the final regulations on a technicality. We hope that if President Obama is reelected, administration officials will use the opportunity the judge has given them to rewrite the rules and put the teeth back into these important regulations.

4. Not Holding Traditional Colleges Accountable for Affordability and Outcomes: The Obama administration has made it easier for students to pay for college on the front end (Pell increases and FAFSA simplification) and repay their loans on the back end (Income-Based Repayment). What it hasn鈥檛 done is used its power to hold colleges accountable for reigning in college costs or improving student outcomes. President Obama caught our attention when he said he was putting colleges 鈥溾 in his State of the Union address, but his pledge to tie campus-based financial aid to whether colleges provide a 鈥済ood value鈥 has not materialized. Nor has the $1 billion . Nor has mandatory adoption of the financial aid or college . To be fair, these efforts require Congressional cooperation, which has not exactly been forthcoming in this highly-charged election year. But it also requires a willingness to take on the entrenched and powerful institutional interests of One Dupont Circle. If there鈥檚 a second term, we hope that the administration will up both the rhetoric and action to ensure that institutions have some 鈥渟kin in the game鈥 for college costs and outcomes.

5. Not Doing Enough to Reform the Back End of the Student Loan Program: While the Obama administration achieved its most significant higher education victory when it overhauled , it has not done nearly enough to fix the back end of the program 鈥 leaving more and more borrowers at the mercy of the Education Department鈥檚 student loan collection contractors. While administration officials have recently taken to address the worst abuses, they have largely left the current system and its many dysfunctions in place. Collection companies are still being paid based on how much revenue they can extract from defaulted borrowers, and the Department鈥檚 shows no real signs of improving. If there鈥檚 a second term, we hope the administration will make reforming the back-end of the system a much more urgent priority because, as of now, as a result of the government鈥檚 harsh policies and inaction.

Now that we’ve had our say, what do you think? We’d love to hear your thoughts on the administration’s hits and misses.

More 国产视频 the Authors

Amy Laitinen
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Amy Laitinen

Senior Director, Higher Education

Stephen Burd
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Stephen Burd

Senior Writer & Editor, Higher Education

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President Obama鈥檚 Biggest Higher Ed Misses