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Emrey-Arras, Melissa; Bagdoyan, Seto J. – US Government Accountability Office, 2023
In August 2022, the Department of Education announced that, to address the heightened risk of delinquency and default caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, it would provide up to $20,000 of student loan debt relief to borrowers who met certain income thresholds. Borrowers eligible for this relief were to receive up to the full $20,000 in relief if they…
Descriptors: Student Loan Programs, Deception, Risk, Loan Repayment
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Thomas C. O’Malley; Brian C. Payne – Journal of Education Finance, 2023
This paper analyses potential links between extreme optimism and student loan debt. Prior work finds extreme optimism to be associated with imprudent household savings and investment decisions. This paper explores whether these findings are relevant to student loan decisions. Using the most recent administration of the Survey of Consumer Finances…
Descriptors: Positive Attitudes, Student Loan Programs, Debt (Financial), Income
Alexandra Hegji; Sean M. Stiff – Congressional Research Service, 2024
Outstanding Higher Education Act (HEA) Title IV federal student loan debt exceeds $1.6 trillion and is owed by about 45 million borrowers. In August 2022, the Biden Administration announced it would invoke the Higher Education Relief Opportunities for Students Act of 2003 (HEROES Act) to cancel, on a one-time basis, up to $20,000 in qualifying…
Descriptors: Student Loan Programs, Debt (Financial), Loan Repayment, Federal Aid
Jason Delisle; Jason Cohn – Urban Institute, 2023
The Biden administration launched a new income-driven repayment (IDR) plan for federal student loans this year called Saving on a Valuable Education (SAVE). The plan cuts borrowers' monthly payments compared with current IDR plans, provides earlier loan forgiveness for smaller debts, and prevents unpaid interest from accumulating. To better…
Descriptors: Paying for College, Student Loan Programs, Federal Aid, Loan Repayment
Jason Delisle; Jason Cohn – Urban Institute, 2024
Policymakers and the public are increasingly concerned about the payoff students and taxpayers receive from government subsidies for postsecondary education. This concern has led advocates and policymakers to call for stronger quality assurance policies for colleges and universities. Past efforts to enact quality assurance policies have focused on…
Descriptors: Measurement, Income, Intellectual Disciplines, Majors (Students)
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Michelle Mott – College and University, 2023
Since taking office, the Biden administration has sought to advance a complex and ambitious higher education regulatory agenda. The U.S. Department of Education held two separate rounds of negotiated rulemaking in 2021-22 to rewrite rules governing student loan relief programs and institutional accountability. This fall, the agency announced plans…
Descriptors: Presidents, Higher Education, Student Loan Programs, Federal Aid
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Ari Anisfeld; Elizabeth Bell; Oded Gurantz; Dennis Kramer – Society for Research on Educational Effectiveness, 2023
The administration of college financial aid is a key venue through which colleges can affect the likelihood that students will make it to graduation. We investigate the effects of an understudied yet consequential federal student aid policy: Return of Title IV Funds (R2T4). Under R2T4, students "earn" Federal Student Aid over a term or…
Descriptors: College Students, Student Financial Aid, Federal Aid, Educational Legislation
US Congress, 2021
The Consider Teachers Act of 2021 was put in place to amend the Higher Education Act of 1965 in order to improve the service obligation verification process for TEACH Grant recipients, and for other purposes. The Act includes the following sections: (1) Short Title; (2) Teach Grants; (3) Submission of Employment Certification; (4) Extension of…
Descriptors: Educational Legislation, Federal Legislation, Loan Repayment, Grants
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Thanh Hung Nguyen; Bình Nghiêm-Phú; Quang Trong Vu – Cogent Education, 2024
University students are potential customers of peer-to-peer (P2P) lending and pawnbroking services. However, the existing literature has primarily underestimated such borrowers' opinions of these services, especially from a comparative standpoint. In addition, previous studies have also neglected the implications for personal financial and…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Peer Relationship, Foreign Countries, Loan Repayment
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Gaurav R. Sinha; Sean P. Mullen; Christopher R. Larrison; Sicong Sun – Journal of Student Financial Aid, 2024
We examined patterns and sociodemographic correlates of financial characteristics and behaviors among emerging and young (18-34-year-old) student loan borrowers. Employing latent class regression modeling on a subset of the 2018 National Financial Capability Study (N=1,490), we explored a heterogeneous constellation of patterns in these borrowers'…
Descriptors: Student Loan Programs, Young Adults, Educational Finance, Decision Making
Alexandra Hegji; Elayne J. Heisler; Sylvia L. Bryan – Congressional Research Service, 2024
Service-contingent student loan forgiveness and loan repayment programs enable borrowers to have all or part of their student loan debt forgiven or repaid in exchange for work or service in specific fields or professions. In both loan forgiveness and loan repayment programs, borrowers typically qualify for benefits by working or serving in certain…
Descriptors: Student Loan Programs, Federal Aid, Federal Programs, Loan Repayment
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Furquim, Fernando; Deane, K. C.; McCall, Brian P.; DesJardins, Stephen L. – AERA Open, 2022
This paper studies the patterns of individuals' student loan repayment for up to 12 years, tracking borrowers through the formative ages of the early 20s to the late 30s. Using social sequence and cluster analysis to understand these longitudinal repayment histories, we identify five archetypes of loan repayment that describe borrowers'…
Descriptors: Student Loan Programs, Loan Repayment, Loan Default, Racial Differences
Hegji, Alexandra; Shohfi, Kyle D.; Zota, Rita R. – Congressional Research Service, 2022
Outstanding federal student loan debt exceeds $1.6 trillion and is owed by approximately 45 million borrowers. Thus, a policy to broadly cancel federal student loan debt would directly apply to a discrete segment of the U.S. population. Cancelling some amount of federal student loan debt would alleviate loan repayment burdens for qualifying…
Descriptors: Federal Legislation, Student Loan Programs, Student Financial Aid, Debt (Financial)
National Association of Student Financial Aid Administrators, 2022
In this report, the National Association of Student Financial Aid Administrators (NASFAA) seeks to fill the gaps in the conversation by providing thoughtful, systemic, and targeted policy solutions to address underlying flaws in the student loan repayment and servicing systems that lead borrowers into financial hardship. The report outlines…
Descriptors: Educational Equity (Finance), Student Loan Programs, Student Financial Aid, Loan Repayment
Alexandra Hegji; Sean Stiff – Congressional Research Service, 2024
The Biden Administration has taken numerous actions to address student loan debt. These actions have ranged in scope (both in terms of the borrower populations affected and associated modification costs), their rationales, and the avenues through which they were taken (e.g., formal rulemaking procedures, issuance of guidance). One effect of these…
Descriptors: Student Loan Programs, Debt (Financial), Educational Finance, Loan Repayment
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