Bloomberg News reported the astronomical amount spent to collect student debt for higher education. This is nuts.
“The federal government has, in recent years, paid debt collectors close to $1 billion annually to help distressed borrowers climb out of default and scrounge up regular monthly payments. New government figures suggest much of that money may have been wasted.
“Nearly half of defaulted student-loan borrowers who worked with debt collectors to return to good standing on their loans defaulted again within three years, according to an analysis by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. For their work, debt collectors receive up to $1,710 in payment from the U.S. Department of Education each time a borrower makes good on soured debt through a process known as rehabilitation. They keep those funds even if borrowers subsequently default again, contracts show. The department has earmarked more than $4.2 billion for payments to its debt collectors since the start of the 2013 fiscal year, federal spending data show.
“The findings, gleaned from the bureau’s analysis of about 600,000 borrower accounts, come as the Trump administration weighs a shakeup of the government’s student loan program. For years, defaults have mounted despite the improving U.S. economy and the money invested in collecting education debt. Education Secretary Betsy DeVos pledged earlier this year to “do a better job” than the Obama administration at managing the department’s loan contractors. Last week, DeVos suggested that the feds should “start afresh….”
“Debt collectors aggressively angle for new business from the Education Department because the contracts are among the most lucrative in the industry. The government values the latest round at $2.8 billion.
“The government often pays debt collectors nearly 40 times what they bring in, federal records show. Take the government’s rehabilitation program, which targets people who have defaulted on their debt—meaning they missed nine months of payments. If a borrower subsequently makes nine on-time monthly payments of as little as $5 during a 10-month period, their loans are returned to good standing and the default is supposed to be wiped from their credit reports 1 . But the CFPB found that more than 40 percent of these borrowers defaulted again within three years.
“Even when borrowers don’t default, debt collection efforts often yield little. Close to 80 percent of borrowers who rehabilitate their debt make the minimum $5 monthly payment, according to a 2015 estimate by the National Council of Higher Education Resources, a lobbying group that represents student debt collectors and servicers. That means the Education Department is paying its debt collectors up to $1,710 per borrower to collect around $45, regardless of whether the borrower continues to make her payments.”
All those billions for debt collectors, but not enough to provide debt-free awards to needy students.

By 2019, all but one of the current loan servicers will be out of business.
DeVos thinks a monopoly will be better.
But her proposed arrangement also means that the seected monopolist can rip off students in many ways.
See this story and check out the handy link to the USDE announcement.
https://consumerist.com/2017/05/22/education-secretary-devos-to-give-all-student-loan-accounts-to-one-company-strip-away-more-protections/
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This needs to be publiced far and wide. Did you send it to th Times? Washington Post? Wall Street Journal?
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I meant publicized.
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“The federal government has, in recent years, paid debt collectors close to $1 billion annually to help distressed borrowers climb out of default and scrounge up regular monthly payments. New government figures suggest much of that money may have been wasted.”
How asinine!!!!!!! What an-ill-founded idea: making money off of students.
The big thrust for the CC Standards was to make students college and career ready as if the govt. really cared about it constituents. If less fortunate students go on to college, they could be in debt the rest of their lives; always hounded by debt collectors.
My husband got his doctoral degree at Rutgers for less than a $1000 and the reason was that Rutgers is a state university. Without that we could never have afforded his doctoral degree. Two of our children, however, are now strapped with insurmountable loans.
So why frustrate the brilliant, dedicated students who worked so hard to achieve only to come to a dilemma at high school graduation realizing they can’t afford to go to college unless they are ready to become indentured servants the rest of their lives, unable to use their gifts and talents and contribute to society.
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MDF
How much were Rutgers professors earning when your husband attained his doctorate? RU probably was spending less proportionately on football.
Did your husband have a fellowship or work-study plan for his doctorate?
In 1978 Rutgers Grad School of Ed charged $65 per credit; Columbia Teachers College was ~$117.
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Ah, yes, “the improving US economy.” Which sent 52% of that “improvement” to the top 1%. What’s wrong with those people who owe thousands in student loan debt that they aren’t using the “improvement” to make sure they share it with that 1%?
This reminds me of back during the Reagan era when the small weekly paper I worked at would receive press releases from the state welfare department bragging about having prosecuted some poor person for a couple hundred bucks in food stamps or welfare payments because it was found out they’d worked under the table for cash and didn’t report it. Having done a little research and discovered it cost the taxpayers $3 or so for every dollar “recovered,” I phoned DPW and asked how much those triumphs had cost. Wow, they said, they really couldn’t say/didn’t know. Thanks for calling.
If watching their children and grandchildren suffocating under a mountain of debt isn’t enough to send people to the barricades, I don’t know what will.
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Crazy!
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Wait…I can default…get sent to credit collection…and only make $5 payments???? I am paying $352 now.
Hmmmm. defaulting seems like an option…
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