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US Government Caught Massively Fabricating Student Loan Default Data
Zero Hedge ^ | 01/19/2017

Posted on 01/19/2017 10:11:47 AM PST by SeekAndFind

Ever since 2012 we have warned that one of the biggest threats arising from the US student loan bubble - which is no longer disputed by anyone except perhaps members of the outgoing administration - is not that it is soaring at an unprecedented pace, that's obvious for anyone with the latest loan total number over $1.4 trillion, rising at a pace of nearly $100 billion per year, but that the government - either on purpose or due to honest miscalculation - was not correctly accounting for the true extent of delinquencies and defaults. Today, we finally got confirmation that, as speculated, the US government was indeed fabricating student loan default data, making it appear far lower than it was in reality.

An the WSJ reported overnight "many more students have defaulted on or failed to pay back their college loans than the U.S. government previously believed."

The admission came last Friday, when the Education Department released a memo saying that it had overstated student loan repayment rates at most colleges and trade schools and provided updated numbers. This also means that the number of loan defaults in various cohorts is far greater than previously revealed.

A spokeswoman for the Education Department said that the problem resulted from a "technical programming error."

And so, the infamous "glitch" strikes again.

How bad was the data fabrication? When The Wall Street Journal analyzed the new numbers, the data revealed that the Department previously had inflated the repayment rates for 99.8% of all colleges and trade schools in the country. In other words, virtually every single number was made to appear better than it actually was. And people mock China for its own "fake data."

According to an analysis of the revised data, at more than 1,000 colleges and trade schools, or about a quarter of the total, at least half the students had defaulted or failed to pay down at least $1 on their debt within seven years. This is a stunning number and suggests that the student loan crisis is far greater than anyone had anticipated previously. It also means that the US taxpayer will be on the hook for hundreds of billions in government-funded loans once attention finally turns to who is expected to foot the bill for years of flawed lending practices.

As the WSJ adds, this isn’t the first time data problems have affected the Education Department: a recent government report criticized how the department tracks information including the budgetary implications of student loan forgiveness.  “This is a quality control issue with a Department of Education that has been facing criticism already for other data issues,” Robert Kelchen, an assistant professor of higher education at Seton Hall University.  The department “needs to be regularly audited so these issues can be discovered sooner.”

There is another interpretation: as we reported yesterday, when we revealed that a Chinese province admitted it had fabricated fiscal data for the period 2011-2014, the reason the data were made up "because officials wanted to advance their careers." One can imagine that the career pressure for those government workers who would report, and be held accountable, for revealing the true picture of America's disastrous student loan bubble, would be likewise staggering.

* * *

Going back to the report findings, the student loan repayment rates were originally released in 2015 as part of the Obama administration’s College Scorecard, which followed an aborted attempt to rate colleges and tie federal funds to those ratings.

At the time, the Journal reported that at 347 colleges and vocational schools, more than half of students had defaulted or failed to pay down their debt within seven years. Those figures were based on students were supposed to start repaying loans in 2006 and 2007.  In September, the Department released data tracking students who should have begun repayment in 2007 and 2008, and that number rose to 477. But with the updated number released last week, that number grew to 1,029. Worse, no college saw its repayment rate improve under the revision, and some schools saw their seven-year repayment rates fall by as much as 29%.

The worst offender was the University of Memphis which had one of the largest drops in its repayment rate following the recalculation. Previously, the Department said that 67% of its students were repaying loans within seven years of entering the repayment period. That number fell to 47% after the recalculation.

The University was not happy. In a statement, the school said it “was not contacted by or made aware of the data changes” from the Education department.  “Given the magnitude of the numerical changes in the report released by the Department of Education, the University of Memphis will be challenging the accuracy of the newly adjusted data,” the statement said.

The far more dire implications, however, are for broader student loan market, because if the latest unfabricated data suggesting that loan delinquencies are rapidly rising toward 50% across most of America's colleges, then the US is facing a default problem of staggering proportions. Recall that back in December 2014, The Treasury Borrowing Advisory Committee forecast that in an aggressive scenario, as much as $3.3 trillion in student loans could be oustanding by 2024. Incidentally, that is the scenario that has captured the growth of student loans since it was presented.

 

Apply default rates of 40-50% to this number, and the bill to the US taxpayer for the next mass bailout starts taking shape.



TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: default; fabrication; government; studentloans
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To: musicman

:-)


41 posted on 01/19/2017 11:14:14 AM PST by rdcbn (.... when Poets buy guns, tourist season is over ......d)
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To: SMARTY

Anyone is eligible for federal loans. There are a few need based loans but the majority are available to all.

The real issue isn’t defaults per se - federal loans generate revenue for the federal government so taxpayer isn’t plaything anything - it’s that the loans haven’t made college more affordable, it just results in universities upping tuition and using the loan revenue to make large capital expenditures. That’s why college has got pricier than price of inflation for so long. Best thing to do is to impose cost controls on schools who want to receive federal aid funds.


42 posted on 01/19/2017 11:27:37 AM PST by socalgop
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To: socalgop

The money is from US tax revenue


43 posted on 01/19/2017 11:29:14 AM PST by SMARTY ("What is freedom? To have the will to be responsible for one's self. "M. Stirner)
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To: SeekAndFind

problem resulted from a “technical programming error.”


What is her name?


44 posted on 01/19/2017 11:29:52 AM PST by PeterPrinciple (Thinking Caps are no longer being issued but there must be a warehouse full of them somewhere.)
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To: SeekAndFind

Another Obama Administration non-scandal.


45 posted on 01/19/2017 12:39:04 PM PST by Steve_Seattle
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To: Responsibility2nd
"Shillary would have simply forgiven that debt. Made tuition for colleges and universities free."

Which would perhaps have been the most massive vote-buying scheme in history. In effect, she was telling hundreds of thousands of voters, "Vote for me, and I'll give you "x" thousands of dollars in debt-forgiveness."
46 posted on 01/19/2017 12:46:02 PM PST by Steve_Seattle
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To: SMARTY

And that has to go. No more federal funds and the college’s have to eat the losses.


47 posted on 01/19/2017 1:01:17 PM PST by Shadow44
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To: SeekAndFind

It also means that the US taxpayer will be on the hook for hundreds of billions in government-funded loans

Hmmm, Shouldn’t the Liability be on the SCHOOLS that Profited from the bogus loans?

Attention Congress, you can fix this.


48 posted on 01/19/2017 1:05:27 PM PST by eyeamok (destruction of government records.)
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To: Shadow44

Right, what’s the ruse to get through school in 4 years?

Why not WORK and take a little longer? When you graduate then you have some work experience.


49 posted on 01/19/2017 1:10:19 PM PST by SMARTY ("What is freedom? To have the will to be responsible for one's self. "M. Stirner)
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To: socalgop
Best thing to do is to impose cost controls on schools who want to receive federal aid funds

Then you are inviting federal control and bureaucracy into the school. Let the school compete for the students dollar without restriction. No govt mandates, and let parents and students decide if a school is worth the solicited cost. When schools see that people wont pay for crap classes or social programs, they will change or die.

The ONLY justifiable motivation for govt interest in education is to ensure we have a well enough educated work for to provide for our national defense needs (scientists, mathematicians, doctors, etc).

50 posted on 01/19/2017 1:17:43 PM PST by Magnum44 (My comprehensive terrorism plan: Hunt them down and kill them)
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To: SMARTY

It’s not that. It’s the economics behind it. Tuition is too expensive, it needs to have the free money spigot cut off because nobody will ever cut costs without forcing the issue.

College’s love the party mentality that’s causing superseniors. They can hook them on for more debt.

The bubble has to burst and they never do until the money dries up.

And that would make people able to work their way through college even easier with lower costs.


51 posted on 01/19/2017 1:18:57 PM PST by Shadow44
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To: SeekAndFind

Fake Data .... good term.

Well if you think about it we need lots of FAKE DATA so that the FAKE NEWS people have something to report on.


52 posted on 01/19/2017 1:20:27 PM PST by Lorianne
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To: Mr. K
The college pays huge amounts to liberal college professors administrators.

Most colleges and universities are relying on as many low-paid, part-time faculty as they can.

It's the administrators whose numbers and salaries have bloated astronomically over the past 25 years: that's where almost all the tuition increases are going.

53 posted on 01/19/2017 2:01:47 PM PST by pierrem15 ("Massacrez-les, car le seigneur connait les siens")
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To: Hoffer Rand

Blame the massive defaults on Trump. That’s probably what’s going to happen.


54 posted on 01/19/2017 3:56:44 PM PST by virgil (The evil that men do lives after them.)
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To: virgil

Yeah, they’re going to suddenly find all these defaults, right along with the soaring homeless numbers and massive numbers of people not working. It’s going to be amazing, they will materialize out of the ether.


55 posted on 01/19/2017 4:01:59 PM PST by Hoffer Rand (God be greater than the worries in my life, be stronger than the weakness in my mind, be magnified.)
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To: Mr. K

The government certainly has motive to hide the figures; it props up the education industry (pseudo-economy), and can’t have young Americans balk at providing cushy lifestyles for those employed in academia.

Here in NJ they seem to have given up on American students, and are just airlifting in Asians to replace them.


56 posted on 01/19/2017 8:09:53 PM PST by kearnyirish2 (Affirmative action is economic warfare against white males (and therefore white families).)
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To: metmom

My son payed his back with his signing bonus and gave the rest of his bonus to us to cover our side of the loan. His older sister is holding down 2 part-time jobs (thanks Obamacare) and will need another 10 years, or, on the other hand, just a few after Obamacare is repealed.


57 posted on 01/19/2017 11:51:01 PM PST by lkco
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