Sunday, March 23, 2008

Congress Braces for Student-Loan Crisis, While Declaring It Unlikely

When Nelnet, the nation's No. 2 consolidator of student loans, announced in January that it would stop making consolidation loans, Number 3 NextStudent now has said the same, members of Congress didn't seem to bat an eye.

A week later, the College Loan Corporation, the eighth-largest originator of federally guaranteed loans, followed suit.

If you want a collage loan you better start applying six months before you need it since it might be non existent. Hillery Clinton and Obama both want to do away with the FFELP program altogether if elected, and that would mean no more federal lending for student loans.

Economy bogs down student loan options

Once easy to get, the availability of private or alternative education loans may be hindered by more stringent regulations on lending, prompted by the unstable economy.

A student with a less-than-perfect credit history could get a high-interest loan from a private lender in past years, but this may not be the case now, said Mark Kantrowitz, publisher of finaid.org.

The Project on Student Debt identified the mortgage market as the culprit of student loan worries in their article, "The Real Story on Student Loans and the Credit Squeeze."

"Mostly because of problems in the mortgage market, there has been a decline in the number of investors willing to purchase some types of financial instrument," the article reads. "Some student loan companies have been using these methods of financing to raise money to make student loans. With the unexpected loss of financing, these companies will need to either get out of the student loan market or revamp their financing methods."

But the good news is that experts agree the credit crunch is the lenders', not the students', problem.

At a United States Senate hearing March 12, Sen. Edward Kennedy, head of the Senate Education Committee, said the credit crunch is primarily impacting banks and other lenders, as many financial lenders can no longer afford to lend educational loans.


Kantrowitz supported Kennedy's stance that the economy is more severely affecting the lenders and not students.

Kantrowitz also said the diminishing competition of loan lenders shouldn't be a huge concern to students now, but may be next year.

"Choices are going to be much more limited...I'm much more concerned about lenders leaving a year from now," he said.

Bob Shireman, president of The Institute for College Access and Success, and Kantrowitz recommended students fully exhaust all possibilities for receiving federal aid before turning to alternative loans. Students sometimes do not fill out the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) because they think they won't be eligible for aid or because applying for alternative loans is easier.

Kennedy estimated 40 to 60 percent of students haven't taken full advantage of federal options for financing college.

The Web site for "The Project on Student Debt" unveiled a way students can get extra Stafford loans so they don't need to go to private lenders.

"If your parents have serious credit problems and can't get a (federal) PLUS loan, the financial aid officials at your school can double your eligibility for federal students loans," allowing students to borrow up to $46,000 in Stafford loans, reads the Web site.

Kantrowitz encouraged students to tell their financial aid officers if they still cannot get the loans they need. Financial aid officers can sign the college up for the Direct Loan program, in which money for college loans comes straight from the Federal Reserve.