
Even if students go bankrupt, private lenders still make them pay up
“What is so different about discharging student loans that is different from everything else that is dischargeable?” asked Rep. John Conyers, Jr. (D-MI) at Wednesday’s hearing about private (“alternative”) student loans and bankruptcy. “This isn’t a gambling debt, this isn’t something against the common good.” The hearing was held to reconsider a law that allows private lenders to prevent loans from being discharged if a student declares bankruptcy.
Unfortunately, only 4 out of 14 other committee members attended, but the majority of senators and witnesses echoed Conyers’ sentiments. The harsh and unforgiving treatment of private student loan debt is the exception to the rule for most noncriminal consumer debt. The current policy protects private lenders and puts borrowers in dire financial straits. Although federal student loans are also not dischargeable, they have numerous consumer protections, repayment options, and loan forgivness programs in place– private lenders do not.
There is a grave need to change this strange and dangerous policy. Witness Lauren Asher, President of the Institute for College Access and Success, spoke about the desperate situations of student borrowers today. College costs have outpaced family incomes, and financially trapped students must have honest lenders who will not prey on their need or ignorance. But Asher cited some highly disturbing examples of the predatory lending epidemic raging across our nation’s campuses.


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In an op-ed in Forbes.com yesterday tactfully entitled