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Education United States

$1.7 Billion in Student Loan Debt Cancelled for 66,000 Borrowers (qz.com) 72

Quartz reports: For years, the student loan servicing company Navient allegedly encouraged student loan borrowers to enter costly long-term forbearance programs that pushed them further into debt, as well as take on private loans they couldn't pay back, according to lawsuits filed by several states, and joined by 39 attorneys general.

Those claims were resolved through a settlement announced Thursday (January 13) affecting some 400,000 borrowers. Navient says it will cancel $1.7 billion in private student loan debt for 66,000 borrowers, as well as pay an additional $95 million in restitution to 350,000 people with federal loans. The former deal mostly focuses on students who took out loans to attend for-profit colleges between 2002 and 2014....

While Thursday's settlement is significant for private student loan borrowers in debt, it extends to just a fraction of the estimated 12 million student loan borrowers Navient has served since 2014. Borrowers eligible for debt cancellation include those who took out private subprime student loans between 2002 and 2014 through the company's predecessor, Sallie Mae.

Borrowers who were behind on payments for seven consecutive months prior to June 30, 2021 qualify to have their loans canceled, but those who are current on their loans do not.

Navient "expressly denies violating any law", according to a statement from the company, in which their chief legal officer insists "these matters" were "based on unfounded claims," but that settling them for $1.85 billion "allows us to avoid the additional burden, expense, time and distraction to prevail in court."

But Mike Pierce, executive director of the Student Borrower Protection Center, tells Quartz that "This is a really big day for people with student debt."

"Borrowers that are still struggling more than a decade later with loans, with the worst terms, after going to the worst schools, are finally debt free."
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$1.7 Billion in Student Loan Debt Cancelled for 66,000 Borrowers

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  • Universal basic income next
    • by jd ( 1658 )

      Well, switching to a student grant system would be the logical next step, so as to stop creating problems, followed by a UBI that is index-linked to a standardized shopping basket. I'm not sure you could do much more in America, but Britain could also do with reversing the privatization of healthcare and funding the damn thing properly. A sick nation is an expensive nation.

      • Well, switching to a student grant system would be the logical next step

        Technically we do have that, it just needs more funding.

      • It is about spending a dime now, or ten dollars later. A UHC, preferably single-payer would save trillions in the US.

        Simple statistics: The US spends more per capita, and total on health care than any country, even "socialist" countries like Denmark/Norway/Sweden. Right now, basically anything short of letting people die in the streets is better than what we have now, and would save taxpayers enough money to actually toss in a UBI as well.

      • by vivian ( 156520 )

        That sounds similar to the Higher Education Contribution Scheme (HECS) system we have in Australia - as an Australian citizen you can go to uni and have your education funded by a government backed discounted loan that has to be paid back at a fixed rate every year once your income exceeds a certain threshold - about $50000.
        The benefit of this is that similar to the free Uni education that preceded this system, anyone could still afford to go to Uni (but only for your first degree) - but it meant you would

        • by jd ( 1658 )

          Education is partly about getting a job, but only initially. Once you've been in a job for 4-5 years, job experience will count for more. A degree is 3-4 years, so what gives it an edge? Well, you're also learning about how to learn and how to exploit resources (such as the Internet and library) to best advantage. This, however, is something a liberal arts degree will also provide - to an extent, depending on the specific degree. As such, I'm not opposed to liberal arts, in a joint honours with a more techn

      • You're assuming your govt, which is beholden to the banks (who make eye-watering profits from student debt), has any intention of helping students if/when they need it.
      • by bjwest ( 14070 )

        A sick nation is an expensive nation.

        A sick nation is a profitable nation for healthcare corporations, be it insurance, parma or care/treatment, and that's all that seems to matter in this country.

    • by gtall ( 79522 )

      The company made money by giving loans for students attending for-profit colleges. These are the Betsy DeVos supported schools. Those companies and those for-profit colleges prey on poor students and veterans. Ol' Betsy was prime Dear Leader material, he too had a "university" devoted to parting people from their money, grifters of a feather.

      So naturally you find a way to support them. Well done, you stupid git.

    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      You want society to keep working?

  • by 140Mandak262Jamuna ( 970587 ) on Saturday January 15, 2022 @03:41PM (#62175635) Journal
    These vultures are parting with 1.7 billion they must fear they will lose in trial even bigger amount.

    And they forgive loans only to those who were more than 7 months behind. All those who actually paid are out of luck. Courts should not allow this provision. In fact all lenders can file amicus briefs asking the court to disallow such a deal. If it goes through all the borrowers of all the loans will make the rational decision to be at least 7 months behind.

    • If only. These vultures are only on the hook for $50 million here, as I explain elsewhere on this thread - that's the current market value of this portfolio of shitty loans that were never destined to be repaid. What they should fear here is criminal trials - but that will never happen. You are dead right on the last points, punishing those who tried to do the right thing is profoundly unfair. And just to compound the injustice - if said 'responsible' victim falls behind on their loan in the future, the
    • I agree. I fit this settlement except that I was able to refi part of my loans against my house. After 10 years of payments, I owed more than I borrowed from SM. My bankruptcy atty refused to even consider an adversarial proceeding.

      Oh, my degree was not underwater basketweaving or gender studies like RINO "republicans" like to say. I was an MBA from Duke. In my 45+ years of existence, that was the worst thing I ever did. Had I slept with 1000s of people and contracted every STD, that degree would still be a

  • Is you look at price of education, it went up when government regulated the loan system. Now people who working extra to pay it back have to keep doing it, but people who are smart enough not to give them a cent are forgiven, lmao.
    • by owlaf ( 5251737 )
      Is it that simple? If I understand correct, a significant reason for increasing university (more specifically state supported) cost is the increasing percentage of the population going to university. The states contributions can't keep up per student. As the more went off to a university, the govt became more involved with student loan regulation because it was being used more.
      • by PPH ( 736903 )

        the increasing percentage of the population going to university

        Demand pull inflation. Perish the thought of the government stepping in and putting a lid on education costs.

        • Re: Sad⦠(Score:5, Insightful)

          by BytePusher ( 209961 ) on Saturday January 15, 2022 @05:02PM (#62175815) Homepage
          The BPACPA massively increased the monetary supply for education by removing the default risk. Demand for education alone wouldn't increase the price as there is more than sufficient supply of people willing to work as teachers and more than enough buildings to teach kids. Tuition went up because the demand is inelastic for most Americans. They're going to go to college no matter the cost, because not going to college generally is a life sentence of poverty. So as the monetary supply increased schools just raised prices at will, only limited by the political cost of raising tuition too fast. The pharma/healthcare industry has done the same. Martin Skrelli is only being punished, because he shined a spotlight on standard industry practice by doing the same thing too fast.
          • by PPH ( 736903 )

            The BPACPA massively increased the monetary supply for education by removing the default risk.

            Educational institutions never suffered a default risk. Loans don't have to be paid until after graduation. And schools collect their fees up front. It moved the default risk away from the lenders and on to the students. You WILL pay your loans back. So lenders have no motivation to evaluate the ROI and payback risks for different types of degrees. 'Soft' subjects like humanities and arts could get loans just like STEM subjects.

            there is more than sufficient supply of people willing to work as teachers

            In the soft subjects. Not so much in STEM fields. And it's not willing to work,

      • Re:Sad⦠(Score:4, Insightful)

        by ravenshrike ( 808508 ) on Saturday January 15, 2022 @08:54PM (#62176245)

        More people are going to college because when the government underwrote the loan system and also made school loans non-dischargable so more kids went to college because they could secure loans even though in the previous environment the banks and loan companies would never ever issue loans to prospects who under normal conditions couldn't pay them back and would be able to discharge them in bankruptcy. This dumped a shitpot more money and bodies into the mix for colleges to access, and they had to upgrade facilities to meet increased demand. Since they were upgrading facilities, and the primary reason many kids were going to college was not for a career after they finished their education but to get a higher education in whatever they felt like which would magically provide a career, the available facilities became the primary draw for many prospective students instead of a quaternary draw behind cost and school performance and program availability. Which means it became a rate race not for quality of education vs price, but who could boast the neatest facilities and college "culture". And it goes without saying the effectively free government money increased the graft in school administration exponentially.

        • Since they were upgrading facilities, and the primary reason many kids were going to college was not for a career after they finished their education but to get a higher education in whatever they felt like which would magically provide a career,

          That was always how it worked in most cases (exceptions like medicine and engineering aside), and the whole idea behind liberal arts. You go to university and get a degree, and learn in the process about learning and extending knowledge and how to think and synthesi

          • That was always how it worked in most cases (exceptions like medicine and engineering aside), and the whole idea behind liberal arts.

            And the only people who got liberal arts degrees were those willing to work their asses off to pay for it, a distinct minority, or those whose parents were both rich enough and willing to be the cosigner of the loan, thus insulating them from the consequences of their actions and by far the vast majority of those who got liberal arts degrees at the time. Dischargeable loans were a firebreak against idiocy. The government in its oh so infinite wisdom removed that firebreak

    • Re: Sad⦠(Score:5, Insightful)

      by BytePusher ( 209961 ) on Saturday January 15, 2022 @04:20PM (#62175695) Homepage
      Actually, if you correlate it with the passing of BPACPA(thanks Biden!) you see a hockey stick elbow there. Removing the possibility of students defaulting on their loans made the banks and universities more eager to increase the cost of education. Banks get a bigger piece of the interest pie, universities got a bigger piece of the principle. The issue wasn't regulations, it was the banking industry buying legislation that benefited them at the expense of their customers.
    • Dont have to pay if you move abroad either :D Not sure why they are trying so hard to get rid of all the educated ppl over there in murica
      • That's exactly how the Republican Party likes it's constituents unfortunately; otherwise, you'd see a lot less people wanting to take horse de-wormer over an approved vaccine.
    • by jd ( 1658 )

      The problem with a loan system is that you're charging the students, the industries that then use those students, the industries that outsource to the university AND the population at large (including those overseas unless they give up citizenship) -- mostly to fund the lifestyles of the lenders, with only a small amount going to the universities themselves, in such a way as to enslave students to the loan sharks.

      This doesn't seem like a productive or efficient way to do things.

  • I want to see the distribution of degree or course of study.

    Anyone wanna bet the percentage of courses like Gender Studies, Ethnic Studies, and the like.

    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      Interesting question. Of course student loans come hand-in-hand with useless studies that can be mastered by people that do not have talent, skill and potential and should have stayed away from advanced education anyways. Got to push your product to as many suckers as possible after all!

      Unfortunately, STEM education (direly needed by any modern society and economy) sort-of gets thrown under the bus too. But you can fix that by importing graduates from abroad. At least as long as those think it is worthwhile

  • "Borrowers who were behind on payments for seven consecutive months prior to June 30, 2021 qualify to have their loans canceled, but those who are current on their loans do not. " At least until Jan 20 2025 and there "may" be a new administration.
    • by Sebby ( 238625 ) on Saturday January 15, 2022 @04:20PM (#62175697)

      "Borrowers who were behind on payments for seven consecutive months prior to June 30, 2021 qualify to have their loans canceled, but those who are current on their loans do not. " At least until Jan 20 2025 and there "may" be a new administration.

      Yeah, this makes no sense to me.

      It's like those asking to forgive all student debt: forgive debts of those that presumably got scammed into getting into debt in the first place, but all those that came before and have paid all (or nearly all) of their debt off don't get any relief (presumably because the debt no longer exists, or they were rich enough to afford it).

      Put another way: if both had, say, $70000 in debt, forgiving it for one puts them ahead financially in life, while the other person is already behind financially compared to the other.

      It's fine to solve an injustice, just don't create another for someone else in the process.

      • It's fine to solve an injustice, just don't create another for someone else in the process.

        That reminds me of jury duty: solve one injustice by creating another dozen (or thereabouts, depending on jury size).

    • At least until Jan 20 2025 and there "may" be a new administration.

      What's funny is the con artist put in place someone who refused to allow loan forgiveness, yet he himself takes great advantage of loan forgiveness for his failing properties and golf courses.

      • Good point. He did it, so we should be like him.

        When it comes to loan forgiveness, be careful to distinguish between private money and taxpayer money.

    • by mark-t ( 151149 )
      Presumably, a person who has missed 7 consecutive months of payments will still take a major hit on their credit rating, and it will greatly complicate getting loans in the future. The loan might be forgiven. That shouldn't make the credit hit go away.
    • by Jack9 ( 11421 )

      Re: Cancellation

      > must be within one of the restitution-participating stateslisted above,Arkansas, Kansas,
      Michigan, Rhode Island, South Carolina,Vermont,West Virginia, or associated with a military addressed postal code

      So this isn't even across all loans (as the summary implies), as you have to meet some state-mailing-address criteria.

      While there's a bunch of discussion about public education, these loans were largely issued to people enrolling in unaccredited institutions.

  • Not many companies can write off $1.7B of receivables and still stay in business. Must be an insanely profitable enterprise.
    • Navient is the processor of the loans. The loans are sold as securities on the stock market to pension funds, etc. That's who is going to lose the $1.9B, not Navient. I believe Navient only has to pay $95M. Note that Navient is a new company formed out of the collapse of Sallie Mae. But... these loans have been in default for a long time and the value of the effected bonds has already been hit. What is new is that the student borrowers are permanently being forgiven. If you investigate further I would ex

      • Thanks for the heads up. I found a more detailed account of the settlement on WSJ and it appears private investors will be talking the loss on this one:

        Navient Corp. NAVI -0.27% , a student-loan servicer that split off from Sallie Mae in 2014, agreed to the sum in a settlement with 40 state attorneys general. The loans are private loans, so the losses will be covered by Navientâ(TM)s investors rather than the federal government.

        Source (paywalled): https://www.wsj.com/articles/s... [wsj.com]
  • Borrow as much as you can
    Earn as little are you can
    Make some other sucker pay
    Profit!

  • by RogueWarrior65 ( 678876 ) on Saturday January 15, 2022 @05:05PM (#62175819)

    It won't be long now. Much of student loans out there are exactly the same as sub-prime mortgages 15 years ago. Loans were given willy nilly to people who could never possibly pay them off in order to affect the oxymoron that is social engineering. Somebody gets stuck with the bill for the bailout. That would be the people who pay the most in taxes who are smart enough and successful enough to earn that kind of money.

    So, what you're going to see going forward is inflation of hiring standards where having a degree is not enough and having a useless degree is worthless.

  • Now they just owe taxes on the forgiven amount as income.
  • People paying still have to pay but those who refuse to pay have debt canceled. Looks like everyone should refuse
  • Financial reporters should know better. The notional value of the student debt - the face value of all of the loans - is $1.5 billion == 1.5 x 10^9 . That's the amount of debt the customers (victims of the fraud) took on.

    But these were all sh*tty loans that were never going to be repaid. So the market value - the amount deemed likely to be collected by squeezing water from the stones (aka the suckers) - was just $50 million == 5 x 10^7.

    “Navient booked an after-tax charge of approximately $170 m

  • Now if they could just get rid of my student loans from ITT Tech from the early 90's... I've been unsuccessful at having those dismissed so far! I wasn't in the group lucky enough to have theirs dismissed. But I WAS one of the people who was lied to by ITT Tech and told that the credits were fully transferable... (They were, but only to another ITT Tech.. .and having no degree was better than having any degree from ITT Tech!) I have owed money my entire adult life as a result.
    • by Pascoea ( 968200 )
      Add DeVry to that list. I mean, TECHNICALLY all of my credits transferred to a real college. But it was great having to transfer my advanced calculus credits in as "general education", then paying to take Trig and Stats because otherwise I wouldn't have enough math credits to graduate.
  • future education loans. Does the government make all education loans now? Because I can't see any one else doing it. And if this keeps going the money the government is spending will become a huge issue. I mean how much money can a broke government keep throwing on the fire?
  • Because all they were doing is being good capitalists and ripping off their customers as much as possible.

  • The fundamental problem is treating education as if it were a business with simplified, narrowly defined returns on investment. It doesn't work very well like that. Education is an investment in our futures, e.g. the next generation that's expected to keep our economies afloat when we're not longer earning. The costs of education are small compared to the revenue a highly educated, debt-free work force generates. Economic growth is often held back by a lack of suitably qualified workers & it usually tak
  • Companies give back billions of dollars all the time without any wrong doing being involved. Absolutely nothing to see here!

    We should seriously be pulling the charter of any company that does shit like this. They clearly don't further the public interest by existing.

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