The effects of risk-sharing for student loans

As the amount of student debt in the United States increases and concerns about students default proliferate, policymakers are considering many options for reducing the debt of those seriously in need of help. One such idea is “risk-sharing.” Under this proposed policy, if a student defaults on his or her loan then the university he or she graduated from is responsible for paying part of the loan.

How would colleges and universities respond to a policy like this? A new paper by Temple University economist Douglas A. Webber tries to answer that question, at least in part. One potential consequence of risk-sharing would be an increase costs for schools. If they’re on the hook for some loans then the marginal cost of admitting a student would go up.

Webber uses data from the Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System, or IPEDS, from the U.S. Department of Education. The data cover the 1987-1988 school year to the 2010-2011 school year, but not every year for every school in the data. He then uses the data to create a model that estimates the effects of risk-sharing.

The amount of increase in tuitions varies quite a bit depending upon the kind of higher-education institution. Colleges and universities that have higher default rates and students with more loans and larger amounts of loans would see the largest increases in tuition. And because those kinds of institutions are concentrated in the for-profit sector, tuition at for-profit should would jump up the most.

Webber’s model tuition at for-profit schools predicts an increase of 1 to 2 percent under the less-stringent form of risk-sharing or by 3 to 4 percent under the more-stringent risk-sharing arrangement. The increases for other types of schools would be much lower. Student-debt from the for-profit sector would decrease by $13 million per institution per year under the less-stringent arrangement and $80 million under the stronger form.

But these calculations assume that institutions would do nothing to reduce the default rate of their students. As Webber points out, this is hopefully an unreasonable assumption about the behavior of schools. History shows it to be unrealistic as universities and colleges seem to have cut default rates in response to a 1991 law change punishing institutions with high default rates.

What happens to Webber’s calculations once we assume schools will try to reduce default rates? Assuming a 10 percent drop in default rates, the increases in tuition would be smaller across all types of colleges and universities. And the decrease in student debt would be considerable larger, at about $42 million to $130 million, depending on the level of risk-sharing.

The plan does have some drawbacks. In particular, Webber finds that risk-sharing would result in a decline in the number of students attending and graduating from institutions of higher education. He points out that a reduction in college graduates might not be worrying because the higher prices will signal to some potential students that college might not be an economically sound investment for them.

But this assumes that the students turned away by higher prices would necessarily not be a good fit for college. We know that isn’t true. Or the savings from fewer defaults and loans could be plowed back into government budgets to reduce tuition prices. Unfortunately, that would only work for public colleges or universities.

So while risk-shifting seems like a policy idea with some merit, we have to be aware of how it might interact with other potential problems in the higher-education system. The unintended consequences are always in the details.

Auto Title Loans: Am I Wrong in Noting a Flagging in Heartland Regional Boosterism?

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Live from Elmwood Cafe: Annamarie Andriotis: The Pitfalls of Payday-Like ‘Title Loans’: “As a federal regulator is expected to release new rules for payday loans, a study suggests borrowers who take out ‘title loans’ against the value of their cars encounter many of the same issues…

…On average, title-loan borrowers pay $1,200 in fees per year on loans averaging $1,000, according to a report released Wednesday by the Pew Charitable Trusts, an independent nonprofit based in Philadelphia. The findings come as the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau plans a Thursday public hearing on payday loans…

As I have said, the extraordinary number of payday loan and title loan storefronts in Kansas City MO/KS relative to Portland OR takes me aback every time I go from one to the other. It makes me think that a huge portion of Kansas City, even people putting up a good front, are teetering on the edge of bankruptcy. It also makes me think that the people of Kansas City are making horrible financial decisions. And it reinforces my belief that too-large as share of the political-financial-business communities of Kansas City are composed not of boosters–not of people who believe that if their neighbors flourish they will flourish–but rather of various kinds of rent-seeking grifters.

For example, let me turn the mike over to Diane Stafford of the Kansas City Star:

Diane Stafford: Some KC law firms wonder if recruitment was economic development or raid on existing business: “Business and civic leaders usually are thrilled when new companies come to town.

But Russ Welsh, the head of Polsinelli, one of Kansas City’s largest law firms, is unhappy that the Kansas City Area Development Council has recruited two West Coast-based law firms to move their administrative operations–about 375 jobs–to Kansas City. In protest he said he’s withholding Polsinelli’s 2015 development council dues, at least for the time being. Welsh, a former chairman of the Greater Kansas City Chamber of Commerce–who otherwise might take an economic booster’s role–has also shared his concerns with the chairmen or managing partners of several other large Kansas City firms and asked for a group meeting Tuesday to talk about it. ‘We have all enjoyed a cost advantage over our competitors because of our location in Kansas City,’ Welsh wrote recently to the other law firms. ‘But I am concerned that this move will increase our employee costs and may drive some of us to move our core administrative functions to other cities.’…

The Kansas City Area Development Council, the agency charged with recruiting businesses to the metro area, led successful efforts to attract new administrative offices to Crown Center of the Littler Mendelson and Sedgwick law firms, two large national firms. Together, the two firms plan to employ about 375 back-office workers in Kansas City. Such offices generally handle information technology, finance, litigation support, human resources, marketing and research operations for the firms. Sedgwick’s recruitment was announced early last year. Littler’s move was announced earlier this month. Both Sedgwick and Littler said they chose Kansas City because it had a wealth of the workforce talent that they want….

Welsh, in a telephone interview Monday, said he was concerned that the Kansas City area lacked enough of that skilled workforce, particularly in information technology, to meet the needs of Sedgwick and Littler as well as those of the local law firms. He likened the situation to ‘raiding each other’ to induce companies to move across the state line between Kansas and Missouri, which fails to create net job gains for the area…. Welsh’s role as a past chamber chairman points out the economic development difference between the chamber and the development council….

And the Kansas City Star’s Editorial Board noted:

Editorial: Sorry, Russ Welsh: Wooing new businesses is good for the Kansas City region: “Getting people and businesses to move to the Kansas City area can be tough…

…No sandy beaches, no mountains, plenty of weather extremes…. Boosters properly point out the metro area’s better sides…. Attracting new companies and employers to Kansas City is almost always a positive thing…. But in recent days, a few lawyers in town have grown concerned that bringing in competitors could bleed them of employees and create higher payrolls. Russ Welsh, chairman and CEO of Polsinelli, recently expressed his ire with the Kansas City Area Development Council…. One good way to make this region a hub for key economic drivers, such as life sciences and information technology, is to invest in better-educated workforces. That includes ensuring nearby colleges and universities produce graduates who can fill the jobs of the future. Trying to shut the door on competitors coming to the Kansas City area is at odds with what needs to happen: Create a better image as a welcome home for new residents and businesses.

The depressing thing is that this needs saying–that it is not taken for granted that the political-financial-business elite of Kansas City MO/KS are composed of metro area boosters…

Over at Grasping Reality: David K. Levine vs. Chris Sims as Refereed by Paul Krugman, with Additional Thoughts

Over at Grasping Reality: David K. Levine vs. Chris Sims as Refereed by Paul Krugman, with Additional Thoughts:

Paul Krugman is the picador…. And Chris Sims is the matador…. Krugman sums up:

By any normal set of intellectual criteria… the evidence that monetary shocks have real effects was and is overwhelming, and it’s very difficult to write down a model in which this is true but in which fiscal policy is never effective at least [at the zero lower bound]. The spectacular success of liquidity-trap predictions these past 6 years is just icing on the cake. To understand why anti-Keynesian delusions persist, then, we need to turn to other social sciences, and try to make sense of the sociological forces that keep these delusions alive.

Over at Grasping Reality: The Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire

Over at Grasping Reality: Erik Loomis: Today’s Economic History: Erik Loomis on the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire:

On March 25, 1911, 146 workers at the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory in New York City died when the building in which they worked caught on fire. One of the most important events in American labor history, the Triangle Fire brought attention to the terrible sweatshop conditions of American labor, helped spawn important labor reforms…. The Triangle Factory, located in the Asch Building at 23-29 Washington Place in New York (today on the campus of NYU), was owned by Max Blanck and Isaac Harris, Jewish immigrants who had made their fortune as ‘The Shirtwaist Kings.’ The shirtwaist, a necessity of women’s clothing during the late Victorian Era, was immensely profitable, but by 1911, the fashion was becoming outdated…

Things to Read on the Afternoon of March 25, 2015

Must- and Should-Reads:

Might Like to Be Aware of:

Afternoon Must-Read: Matea Gold and Tom Hamburger: In 2016 Campaign, the Lament of the Not Quite Rich Enough

Matea Gold and Tom Hamburger: In 2016 Campaign, the Lament of the Not Quite Rich Enough: “At this point in the 2012 presidential race, Terry Neese was in hot demand…

…‘Gosh, I was hearing from everyone and meeting with everyone,’ said Neese, an Oklahoma City entrepreneur and former ‘Ranger’ for President George W. Bush who raised more than $1 million for his reelection. This year, no potential White House contender has called — not even Bush’s brother, Jeb…. The lament of the rich who are not quite rich enough for 2016. Bundlers who used to carry platinum status have been downgraded… eclipsed by the uber-wealthy, who can dash off a seven-figure check to a super PAC without blinking. Who needs a bundler when you have a billionaire?… Fundraisers once treated like royalty because of their extensive donor networks, are left pining for their lost prestige. Can they still have impact in a world where Jeb Bush asks big donors to please not give more than $1 million to his super PAC right now?…

Marriage: How Good an Idea at the Margin?

A fine rant from the very sharp and newly-parental Matthew Yglesias:

Matthew Yglesias: The “Decline” of Marriage Isn’t a Problem: “Among college graduates, marriage has been re-founded on a new basis…

…As Betsey Stevenson and Justin Wolfers put it, we have gone from shared production to shared consumption and formed more egalitarian partnerships based on common preferences rather than a swap of housework for rent money. This new model of partnerships has thus far not taken root as strongly in working-class relationships. That’s unfortunate. But it’s a mistake to believe women are making themselves worse off than their next actually available alternative. As women have become more empowered, they have gotten pickier. That means more single women, and a higher quality of relationship for the non-single.

None of this is to deny either the conservative premise that many people would be better off in stable, loving relationships or the liberal premise that more and better employment opportunities for working-class men could make such relationships more likely.

But to explain a social crisis, you first have to establish that a crisis is occurring. There is no major dimension on which American children are doing worse in 2015 than they were in 1975. That should be a huge giveaway that the decline of marriage is a consequence of something good — prosperity, especially for women — rather than a cause or a consequence of something bad.

But I think Matt goes off the rails at the end, however.

The liberal premise is that there is a social and economic crisis and that is that the rise in inequality that has made blue-collar men less “marriageable”. So Matt’s view that “the decline of marriage is a consequence of something good” is wrong, or at least incomplete. The decline of marriage is in large part the result of something good–modern feminism–and in lesser part the result of and a canary-in-the-coalmine something bad–rising inequality.

And the conservative premise is not “that many people would be better off in stable, loving relationships.” It is considerably different than that:

David Brooks: The Cost of Relativism: “The health of society is primarily determined by the habits and virtues of its citizens…

…In many parts of America there are no minimally agreed upon standards for what it means to be a father…. Norms… were destroyed by a plague of nonjudgmentalism, which refused to assert that one way of behaving was better than another…. It will require holding people responsible…. History is full of examples of moral revival, when social chaos was reversed, when behavior was tightened and norms reasserted. It happened in England in the 1830s and in the U.S. amid economic stress in the 1930s. It happens through organic communal effort, with voices from everywhere saying gently: This we praise. This we don’t…

For Brooks, the enemy is “a plague of nonjudgmentalism”, which would seem to apply that the solution is some form of judgmentalism. That is not exactly a call for people to work harder on establishing loving relationships, is it?

But Brooks is elusive about what kinds of judgmentalism he is calling for. So here we have Judith Thurman reporting on another voice from America’s conservative right:

Judith Thurman: Wilder Women: “When a journalist… asked… Sarah Palin’s sister… she mentioned only one book…

Little House on the Prairie, the third and best known of the eight novels… [of Laura Ingalls] Wilder… describ[ing] the Ingallses’ migration from Wisconsin to Kansas, where they build an illegal homestead on land reserved for the Osage tribe, and suffer a series of Job-like tribulations: predation by wolves and panthers, a prairie fire, malaria, blizzards, menacing encounters with the Indians, and a near-fatal well-gas accident. None of it crushed their spirits or shook their belief in self-reliance, although the story ends on a bitter note—one that Governor Palin might have recalled. Charles learns from a neighbor that federal troops are coming to evict the settlers. The ‘blasted politicians in Washington’ have betrayed them, and, without waiting to be run off ‘like an outlaw,’ he abandons the little house in a rage. In the last scene, with his family camped by its wagon in the high grass, he gets out his fiddle. ‘And we’ll rally round the flag boys,’ he sings. ‘We’ll rally once again / Shouting the battle-cry of Freedom!’ Ma shushes him—it’s too martial a song for the girls, who are half-asleep, but ‘Laura felt that she must shout, too.’…

Morning Must-Read: Alejandro Badel: Economic Mobility across Federal Reserve Districts

Alejandro Badel: Economic Mobility across Federal Reserve Districts: “A recent dataset by economists Chetty, Nathaniel Hendren, Patrick Kline and Emmanuel Saez (CHKS hereafter)…

…People born in 1980-82. The family income of these persons in 2011-12… was compared with the income of their parents in 1996-2000…. We focused on the probability that a child raised in the bottom fifth of the U.S. income distribution rose to the top fifth.

St Louis Fed Economic Mobility across Federal Reserve Districts

Today’s Must-Must-Read: David Wessel: Why Are Unions so Focused on Fighting Trade Deals?

David Wessel: Why Are Unions so Focused on Fighting Trade Deals?: “Less than 10% of all the workers that U.S. unions represent today are in manufacturing or agriculture…

…So with states passing right-to-work laws, Congress pressuring the National Labor Relations Board, the tax code rewarding big corporations that move overseas, funding for education, training and infrastructure under pressure, middle-income wages stagnating across the whole economy, why so much union energy devoted to fighting TPP?…

Rich Trumka… assigns a very large share–an improbably large share, in my view–of the blame for stagnant wages and inequality to recent trade agreements…. There is evidence… that globalization is part of the reason American workers aren’t doing better… by allowing more earning opportunities for those at the top and exposing ordinary workers to more competition, especially in manufacturing…. [And] Mr. Trumka isn’t alone in suggesting that much of what’s in TPP is aimed at shoring up intellectual-property and other protections for U.S. corporations. That’s good for the companies, but may not do much for their American workers…. Still, I find it hard to find an economic rationale for the intensity of the AFL-CIO’s fight against TPP….

Morning Must-Read: Charles Gaba: Dear Pete Sessions: “Bazillion” Is Not a Real Number Either

Charles Gaba: Dear Pete Sessions: “Bazillion” Is Not a Real Number Either: “I can’t even… Here’s why lawmakers should not speak without notes…

…If you just do simple multiplication, 12 million [insured individuals] into $108 billion, we are talking literally every single [Obamacare] recipient would be costing this government more than $5 million per person for their insurance. It’s staggering….$108 billion for 12 million people is immoral. It’s unconscionable. – Rep. Pete Sessions (R-Tex.), statement on the House floor, March 24, 2015….

For the record: Rep. Sessions is not a 3rd grader. He’s 60 years old. He attended (and presumably graduated from) Southwestern University. He was a marketing district manager for Southwestern Bell, and is now the Chair of the House Rules Committee of the United States House of Representatives…. Instead of ‘$108 billion’ Sessions meant ‘$95 billion’, and instead of ’12 million’ he meant ’23 million’.,,, The actual number Rep. Sessions should have used was ‘less than $5,000 per person’ as opposed to ‘more than $5 MILLION per person’ (off by a factor of 1,000x) or, if you believe his later ‘clarification’, ‘$60,000 per person’ (off by a factor of 12x)…. If the ACA really did cost ‘more than $5 million’ for every enrollee, that would be $60,000,000,000,000 ($60 Trillion), which I do admit would be a wee bit on the pricey side. On the other hand, I should thank Rep. Sessions for at least admitting that 12 million people have enrolled in private ACA exchange policies, since some of his Republican colleagues still seem to have a hard time believing that.