Jason Delisle
Director, Federal Education Budget Project
Countless journalists, advocates, and lobbyists claim that the government profits when students default on their federal loans. But this week鈥檚 release of President Obama鈥檚 fiscal year 2013 budget brings further evidence that nothing could be further from the truth. The budget includes a new section that explains more fully the estimated recovery rates on defaulted federal student loans. The recovery rate refers to the percentage of defaulted loan volume the government expects to eventually collect.
This newly-released information also contradicts those who argue that the government doesn鈥檛 bear any default risk in making student loans. That鈥檚 exactly the argument that a number of readers have made criticizing a recent Federal Education Budget Project (Ed Money Watch鈥檚 parent initiative) that concludes that the current fixed 6.8 percent interest rate on federal student loans isn鈥檛 a money-maker for the government, due in part to the cost of loan defaults.