Should For-Profit Colleges Face Stricter Regulations from Uncle Sam?

September 21, 2010 at 5:28 pm 3 comments

Defaults on student loans are on the rise. And according to current data, a main cause may be the recent surge in enrollment at for-profit colleges.

In recent years, the sheer number of these schools has grown considerably, with enrollment climbing from about 365,000 students to almost 1.8 million. For-profit colleges draw the greater part — sometimes 90% — of their funding from federal aid. Since higher enrollment equates to more money, these for-profit schools have a strong economic incentive to encourage students to enroll. Unsurprisingly, a growing body of evidence suggests that this dynamic has led for-profit colleges to encourage students to take on heavy debt loads, often enticing students with false assertions about how much money they’ll earn upon graduating.

It is crucial that policy makers address the question of how the government ought to support these institutions, both to ensure fairness in policy making and, most importantly, to protect students. Heavily indebted students already face enormous financial strain, and the sputtering US economy, not to mention several decades of limited job creation, according to many pundits, will only make matters worse. If these students fail to complete their degrees and are forced to compete in the job market with college graduates, they’ll certainly face even greater obstacles.

Yet for-profit colleges portray themselves as champions for working people and minorities. The new ad campaign that Corinthian Colleges, Inc., a California-based corporation, rolled out in the New York Times and Wall Street Journal this week clearly indicates how the company seeks to position itself as sympathizing with low wage workers. But when situated within its pattern of abusive behavior — in 2007 alone, Corinthian was both sued by the State of California for exaggerating its record of placing students in well-paying jobs and federally investigated by the U.S. Department of Education for “waste, fraud, and abuse of federal education dollars” — this positioning looks downright fraudulent.

Posing as prospective students at 15 for-profit institutions, agents from the Government Accountability Office (GAO) recently discovered that admissions officials at for-profit colleges often engaged in fraudulent, deceptive or dishonest marketing tactics. Admissions officials also lied about the total costs of their schools’ programs, exaggerated the employment opportunities and salaries that prospective students could expect after graduation, and sometimes told students that they could not speak with financial aid counselors until after they had enrolled.

In 2009, students at for-profit colleges received more than $4 billion in Pell Grants and more than $20 billion in federal loans. These same students, however, defaulted on their loans at a rate of 11.6%, compared with 6% of students at public non-profits and 4% at private non-profit colleges. According to the Department of Education, in 2008-2009, students at for-profit schools were 26% of federal student loan borrowers, yet they made up 43% [pdf] — almost half — of defaulters.

The above findings reflect the moral hazards that emerge when a private for-profit industry thrives on federal subsidies without appropriate oversight. As a result of the GAO investigation, the Department of Education has recently proposed new regulations that aim to tighten eligibility requirements that private for-profit colleges must meet before receiving federal student aid. If these regulations are enacted, for-profit colleges will only be eligible to receive federal aid if 1) 45% of their former students are paying down the principle of their federal loans or 2) their students graduate with a debt-to-earning ratio of less than 8%.

The direct impact of tighter regulation would cause 5% of for-profit colleges to become ineligible for federal aid. In addition, 55% of for-profit programs would be required to inform students that they may not earn enough after graduation to repay their loans. Perhaps this will put us on the right track to reclaiming an educational aid system intended to empower students — not saddle them with a lifelong burden of debt.

Until next week,

EARN’s Policy Team

Photo credit: alancleaver_2000

Advertisement

Entry filed under: Education, Policy and Research. Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , .

Grassroots Constituency, Here We Come! Dametra Williams: From Homeless to Prosperous

3 Comments Add your own

  • 1. Estela  |  October 22, 2010 at 1:25 pm

    Oh my God!!! you opened my eyes about this subject. thanks k for the info.

    Reply
  • 2. Andriana B.  |  November 11, 2010 at 12:48 pm

    I think the main part of the problem is the fact that these for profit colleges are in fact targeting low income people. I am only able to speak for myself, and those I have spoken to, but in my experience those who default are the ones who are uneducated on how financial aid works.

    At the university I went to, my friend was a financial aid worker and he saw kids come in and max out all of their loan money because it didn’t click with them that they would eventually have to pay it back. I think these for profit colleges are so much higher in default rates because people with low income go to those schools in higher numbers (hoping to advance themselves personally and professionally).

    Yes, if these schools were not around or there were tighter regulations I think there would not be as many people defaulting on their loans, but I also think there would still be a large amount of people, low income people, defaulting.

    Students are only required to go through a quick Q and A session before getting their loans- what NEEDS to be required is a certain amount of hours a person has to go through with financial aid literacy- such as IDA classes do (at least the one I intern at)- before they are able to get their loans. I see for profit colleges as the payday loans of the academic world.

    Agencies (the government) that give out loans are just as responsible for the protection of these men and women who are trying to further themselves. They are giving the loans out, they are barely requiring knowledge on what happens when you get these loans and the repercussions of A) taking out more than you need B) Defaulting. It is like subprime mortgages- woops- the realtors didn’t think that those who were not financially able to pay these loans after 10 years would default? Oh no there is a huge crisis now! Come on, government, have some accountability.

    Sorry for the novella of a comment- it makes my blood boil when institutions prey on those who are low income and uneducated about finance.

    Reply
    • 3. earnorg  |  November 11, 2010 at 12:55 pm

      Hi Andriana,

      Thanks for the comment! Our blog has actually moved to our new website at http://earn.org/news/blog. Hope you’ll consider re-posting your comment there!

      Best,

      Charlotte

      Reply

Leave a Reply

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out / Change )

Twitter picture

You are commenting using your Twitter account. Log Out / Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out / Change )

Connecting to %s

Trackback this post  |  Subscribe to the comments via RSS Feed


Giving low-income workers the power to create economic prosperity for their families for generations to come!

Join 4 other followers

Spread the Word

Add to FacebookAdd to DiggAdd to Del.icio.usAdd to StumbleuponAdd to Twitter

Categories


Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.