Indentured Servitude for Seniors: Social Security Garnished for Student Debts
By
[This law] assures the elderly that America will always keep the promises
made in troubled times a half century ago…[The Social Security
Amendments of 1983 are] a monument to the spirit of compassion and
commitment that unites us as a people. – President Ronald Reagan, April 20, 1983
So
said Presidents Carter and Regan, but that was before 1996, when
Congress voted to allow federal agencies to offset portions of Social
Security payments to collect debts owed to those agencies. (31 U.S.C.
§3716). Now we read of horror stories like this:
I’m
a 68 year old grandma of 2 young grandchildren. I went to college to
upgrade my employment status in 1998 or 1999. I finished in 2000 and at
that time had a student loan balance of about 3500.00.
Could
not find a job and had to request forbearance to carry me. Over the
years I forgot about the loan, dealt with poor health, had brain surgery
in 2006 and the collection agents decided to collect for the loan in
2008.
At no time during the 6-7 year
gap did anyone remind me or let me know that I could make a minimum
payment on the loan. Now that I am on Social Security (have been since I
was 62), they have decided to garnishee my SS check to the tune of 15%.
I
have not been employed since 2004 and have the two dependents . . . . I
don’t dispute that I owed them the $3500.00 but am wondering why they
let it build up to somewhere around $17,000/20,000 before they attempted
to collect.
Her debt went from $3500 to over $17,000 in 10 years?! How could that be?
It seems that Congress has removed nearly every consumer protection from
student loans, including not only standard bankruptcy protections,
statutes of limitations, and truth in lending requirements, but
protection from usury (excessive interest). Lenders can vary the
interest rates, and some borrowers are reporting rates as high as 18-20%.
At 20%, debt doubles in just 3-1/2 years; and in 7 years, it
quadruples. Congress has also given lenders draconian collection powers
to extort not just the original principal and interest on student loans
but huge sums in penalties, fees, and collection costs.
The
majority of these debts are being imposed on young people, who have a
potential 40 years of gainful employment ahead of them to pay the debt
off. But a sizeable chunk of U.S. student loan debt is held by senior citizens,
many of whom are not only unemployed but unemployable. According to
the New York Federal Reserve, two million U.S. seniors age 60 and over
have student loan debt, on which they owe a collective $36.5 billion;
and 11.2 percent of this debt is in default. Almost a third of all
student loan debt is held by people aged 40 and over, and 4.2% is held
by people over the age of 60. The total student debt is now over $1
trillion, more even than credit card debt. The sum is unsustainable and
threatens to be the next debt tsunami.
Some of this debt is for
loans taken out years earlier on their own schooling, and some is from
co-signing student loans for children or grandchildren. But much of it
has been incurred by middle-aged people going back to school in the hope
of finding employment in a bad job market. What they have wound up
with is something much worse: no job, an exponentially mounting debt
that cannot be discharged in bankruptcy, and the prospect of old age
without a social security check adequate to survive on.
Gone is
the promise of earlier presidents of a “commitment to the belief that
workers should not live in dread that a disability, death, or old age
could leave them or their families destitute.” The plight of the
indebted elderly is reminiscent of the Irish immigrants who came to
America after a potato famine in the 19th century, who were looked upon in some places as actually lower than
slaves. Plantation owners kept their slaves fed, clothed and cared for,
because they were valuable property. The Irish were expendable, and
they were on their own.
It is obviously not a good time to raise interest rates on student debt, but they are set to double on
July 1, 2012, to 6.8%. Many lawmakers in both parties agree that the
current 3.4% rates should be extended for another year, but they can’t
agree on how to find the $6 billion that this would cost. Republicans
want to take the money from a health care fund that promotes preventive
care; Democrats want to eliminate some tax benefits for small business
owners.
Congress cannot agree on $6 billion to save the students,
yet they managed to agree in a matter of days in September 2008 to come
up with $700 billion to save the banks; and the Federal Reserve found
many trillions more. Estimates are that tuition could be provided free to
students for a mere $30 billion annually. The government has the power
to find $30 billion — or $300 billion or $3 trillion — in the same
place the Federal Reserve found it: it can simply issue the money.
Congress
is empowered by the Constitution to “coin money” and “regulate the
value thereof,” and no limit is set on the face amount of the coins it
creates. It could issue a few one-billion dollar coins, deposit them in
an account, and start writing checks.
But wouldn’t that be inflationary? No. The Fed’s own figures show that the money supply (M3) has shrunk by $3 trillion since
2008. That sum could be added back into the economy without inflating
prices. Gas and food are going up today, but the whole range of prices
must be considered in order to determine whether price inflation is
occurring. Housing and wages are significantly larger components of the
price structure than commodities, and they remain severely depressed.
There
is another way the government could find needed funds without raising
taxes, slashing services, or going further into debt: Congress could
re-finance the federal debt through the Federal Reserve,
interest-free. Canada did this from
1939 to 1974, keeping its national debt low and sustainable while
funding massive programs including seaways, roadways, pensions, and
national health care. The national debt shot up only when the
government switched from borrowing from its own central bank to
borrowing from private lenders at interest. The rationale was that
borrowing bank-created money from the government’s own central bank
inflated the money supply, while borrowing existing funds from private
banks did not. But even the Federal Reserve acknowledges that private banks create the money they lend on their books, just as central banks do.
U.S.
taxpayers now pay nearly half a trillion dollars annually to finance
our federal debt. The cumulative figure comes to $8.2 trillion paid in
interest just in the last 24 years. By financing the debt itself rather
than paying interest to private parties, the government could divert
what it would have paid in interest into tuition, jobs, infrastructure
and social services, allowing us to keep the social contract while at
the same time stimulating the economy.
For students, at the very
least the bankruptcy option needs to be reinstated, usury laws restored,
predatory practices eliminated, and the cost of education brought back
down to earth. One possibility for relieving the burden on students
would be to give them interest-free loans. The government of New
Zealand now offers 0% loans to New Zealand students,
with repayment to be made from their income after they graduate. For
the past twenty years, the Australian government has also successfully
funded students by giving out what are in effect interest-free loans.
The loans in the Australian Higher Education Loan Programme (or
HELP) do not bear interest, but the government gets back more than it
lends, because the principal is indexed to the Consumer Price
Index (CPI), which goes up every year.
Predatory
lenders are keeping us in debt peonage through misguided economics and
bank-captured legislators. We have people who desperately want to work,
to the point of going back to school to try to improve their chances;
and we have mountains of work that needs to be done. The only thing
keeping them apart is that artificial constraint called “money”, which
we have allowed to be created by banks and let out at interest when it
could have been created by public institutions for public purposes,
either by direct issuance or through publicly-owned banks. We just need
to recognize our oppressors and throw off their yoke, and the good
times can roll again.
Ellen Brown
Posted: Friday, 12 May 2012
No comments:
Post a Comment