Rachel Fishman
Director, Higher Education
After months of negotiations, the U.S. Department of Education鈥檚 Committee last week came to a tentative consensus about the definition of adverse credit for PLUS loans. This agreement on PLUS loans is a clear middle-ground approach designed to assuage the institutions that experienced significant without angering the consumer and student advocates who are concerned that low- and middle-income families are getting in over their heads with a loan product that has very few consumer protections. Still, this regulatory compromise should only be a short-term fix until more robust statutory changes can be made to the program through reauthorization of the Higher Education Act (HEA).
First, it鈥檚 important to note that it鈥檚 possible, though highly unlikely, that the Department will abandon the agreed upon language. That鈥檚 because the committee was only able to come to tentative consensus on four out of the six issues being discussed during this session of negotiated rulemaking. Two issues鈥斺淪tate Authorization of Distance Education鈥 and 鈥淐ash Management鈥 . This means that the Department can now propose whatever regulatory language it wants on any of the issues discussed鈥攊ncluding the definition of adverse credit for the Direct PLUS loan.
However, given that consensus from various stakeholders was reached on PLUS, it鈥檚 likely that the issue is settled for now. 聽The Department and the negotiating committee should be praised for not reverting back to the pre-October 2011 standards鈥攚here a PLUS borrower could have an account in collections or charged off and not be considered to have an adverse credit history. However, I () am disappointed that only small tweaks were made to the definition that will make no difference for families who too easily get in over their heads on these loans.
In the Department鈥檚 new proposal, PLUS borrowers fail the credit check if they have one or more debts with a total combined outstanding balance greater than $2,085 that are 90 or more days delinquent, charged off, or in collections in the past two years or have been the subject of a default determination, bankruptcy discharge, foreclosure, repossession, tax lien, wage garnishment, or write-off of a debt under title IV in the past five years. (You can see the exact changes to the regulatory language .) Unfortunately, these small tweaks still put the Department in the difficult position of offering a subprime loan to some parent borrowers聽in tandem with the power to collect on that loan through wage, tax refund, and/or social security garnishment. This definition, in other words, enables the Department to be a predatory lender.
If the federal government is going to continue to be in the business of lending money through the Parent PLUS loan program, there needs to be more consumer protections on the loan product and more accountability for colleges and universities that have high PLUS cohort default rates (CDRs). Given that the Department and Congress are currently engaged with Higher Education Act (HEA) reauthorization proposals, here are three changes they should consider related to PLUS loans and college affordability:
1) Add an 鈥渁bility to repay鈥 measure to the credit check for PLUS loans. Looking at someone鈥檚 adverse credit history is divorced somewhat from whether or not someone has the ability to repay a loan. Adding an ability to repay measure would be a much fairer standard, ensuring that parents are able to have access to a loan without borrowing beyond their means.
2) Publish Parent PLUS CDRs by institution and hold institutions accountable to those rates. Parent PLUS loans currently have no accountability and no cap making it easier for colleges to fill financial aid award letters with PLUS loans up to the full cost of attendance. For this reason, the Department should publish institutional Parent PLUS default rates. Just like with current institutional CDRs, the institution if its Parent PLUS CDR is over 30 percent, including eventual loss of eligibility to offer PLUS loans.
Institutions will argue that they have no control over parents who take on these loans and then refuse to pay them back. But 30 percent is such an egregiously high default rate, it鈥檚 indicative that institutions are packaging the loans within financial aid award letters for families that clearly can鈥檛 afford them, and not doing an adequate job explaining PLUS loan repayment requirements and options鈥攊ncluding making parents aware that they can consolidate their PLUS loans in order to qualify for .
3) Expand grant aid for low-income students. PLUS loans are a terrible form of federal financial aid to low-income families. The best way to do this is to redirect the more than $180 billion of poorly-targeted higher education tax benefits into Pell Grants. If we get rid of these tax benefits, the Pell Grant maximum could be increased substantially. The savings from redirecting the tax benefits would ensure that this increase to Pell wouldn鈥檛 cost the federal government a dime.
HEA reauthorization is most likely years away, but it鈥檚 important to start discussing reforms like these now. Parent loans on top of student loans might enable college access, but at what cost to families? More must be done by the federal government to ensure the PLUS loan is a safe product for families, that colleges and universities don鈥檛 use these loans to skirt accountability, and that we re-focus better aid options on the families who need them most.