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Mitt’s for-profit school mess
Romney's plan to fix higher education is a handout to shoddy career schools and a giant step backward
Mitt Romney (Credit: AP) Sometimes it is almost too insultingly easy to connect the dots.
Last week, Mitt Romney blasted Barack Obama’s record on education in a high-profile speech and white paper. The critique ranged from kindergarten to grad school, but let’s pick out one issue that we’ve been following at Salon for some time. On the specific topic of for-profit schools of higher education — notorious both for saddling students with high levels of debt and for their abysmal graduation rates — Romney promises to repeal Obama’s “ill-advised” regulations targeting the sector.
The for-profit school industry gives Mitt Romney a lot of money. One of Romney’s top education advisors is William D. Hansen, who has lobbied extensively for for-profit schools. As deputy secretary of education under George W. Bush, Hansen is well known in the higher education community for issuing a directive promising that the Bush administration would relax the enforcement of rules meant to crack down on student enrollment recruiting abuses at for-profit schools.
That’s right: A man directly responsible for unleashing a decade of egregious misbehavior at for-profit colleges is now advising Mitt Romney on his plans to repeal new rules intended to clean up the mess.
The biggest for-profit schools generate 80 to 90 percent of their revenue from federally guaranteed student loans. Only one out of every ten American college students attends a for-profit institution, but these students account for a quarter of all student debt and almost half of all student loan dollars in default. There’s no sugar-coating it: The booming for-profit industry is one of the worst possible examples of the “free market” in action that one can find in the entire U.S. educational sector. For-profits charge higher tuition rates than their public school competitors, graduation rates are lower, and the entire business would not exist without massive government subsidization in the form of cheap student loans.
Last June, in an effort to address this clear market failure, the Obama administration released a new set of rules designed to tighten eligibility for student aid. Going forward, the new rules will require that most for-profit programs prove they are preparing “students for gainful employment in a recognized occupation.”
The “gainful employment” rules have three parts: At least 35 percent of former students must be actively repaying their loans, and their loan payments must not exceed 30 percent of their discretionary income, or 12 percent of their total earnings. Schools will also be required to make public information on program costs, debt-to-earnings ratios and loan repayment rates, so prospective students will be able to properly judge the quality of the programs so desperate to enroll them. If a school failed to meet these criteria three times in a period of four years, it would no longer be eligible for federal student aid programs.
But according to Mitt Romney’s newly released white paper on education, the “gainful employment” rules are “confusing and unnecessary regulations that primarily serve to drive costs higher” and that have “made it even harder for some providers to operate while distorting their incentives.” So he is pledging to get rid of them.
Yes, it will cost more money to document just how well a “career school” is doing in preparing students to actually embark on a career that pays well enough to pay down the debt accumulated while attending that school. But when your entire business model is based on signing up as many students as possible, nearly all of whom pay their tuition with government loans, some might argue that perhaps it would be a worthy goal to pay a little more attention to whether those students are actually getting educations. And to argue that the new rules distort incentives is baffling. The current incentive structure encourages schools to emphasize high enrollment and profit. That’s what Obama is trying to fix.
Neither Mitt Romney’s speech nor his white paper mention any of the problems exhibited by the for-profit sector. Maybe that’s to be expected when your top advisor has worked as a lobbyist for the Apollo Group, which owns the University of Phoenix, and when that advisor’s main claim to fame during his stint in the Bush administration was letting for-profit schools know that the government would look the other way as enrollment was boosted by any means necessary. And of course, philosophically speaking, it’s not surprising that a firm believer in private enterprise would have a vision of a higher-education future in which competition in the for-profit sector would deliver innovative new models that offer high-quality instruction for low cost.
Except, that’s not the way it works now. The for-profit college sector delivers low-quality education at a high cost, precisely because it is unregulated and unaccountable and has been assured an unlimited supply of student loan dollars. Repealing rules aimed at addressing that disaster won’t fix the problem — it will just make it worse.
Andrew Leonard is a staff writer at Salon. On Twitter, @koxinga21. More Andrew Leonard.
Private equity’s evil twin
The Facebook IPO debacle exposed venture capital as just as problematic as the industry that gave us Romney
Facebook founder, Chairman and CEO Mark Zuckerberg, center, rings the Nasdaq opening bell from Facebook headquarters in Menlo Park, Calif on May 18, 2012 (Credit: AP/Zef Nikolla) A funny thing happened on the way to the Facebook IPO. The clash of competing economic ideologies at play in the 2012 presidential campaign got a lot more complicated.
With our first-ever private equity honcho running for president in an era of high unemployment and slow economic growth, it was always a foregone conclusion that this year’s election campaign would include an appraisal of whether Mitt Romney’s version of capitalism is good for America. It’s a debate the culture has been passionately engaged in at least as far back as Oliver Stone’s “Wall Street,” and the battle lines are well-drawn. Is Bain Capital a parasitic corporate raider or an engine for lean-and-mean capitalist renewal? You get to make the call, and then you can go vote.
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Andrew Leonard is a staff writer at Salon. On Twitter, @koxinga21. More Andrew Leonard.
Wall St. ruins Facebook
The social network's debacle of a public offering exposes, once again, the rotten heart of finance
Mark Zuckerberg (Credit: Reuters/Brian Snyder) Could there be a bigger public relations debacle for an aspiring technology colossus than the Facebook IPO? It’s bad enough when the stock price doesn’t “pop” at all on the first day of trading, but it gets a lot worse when the financial press spends the following week debating whether the machinations behind the scenes leading up to the botched public offering constitute outright evidence of securities fraud or merely a toxic mixture of greed and incompetence.
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Andrew Leonard is a staff writer at Salon. On Twitter, @koxinga21. More Andrew Leonard.
Welcoming Wall Street’s anger
Obama should pick a fight with reckless bankers by beefing up the Volcker rule
Paul Volcker and President Obama (Credit: Reuters/Kevin Lamarque) Jamie Dimon’s Wall Street peers have good reason to be annoyed with him. Over the past several years, the financial sector spent hundreds of millions of dollars lobbying to weaken bank reform. Then came JPMorgan’s multiple-billion-dollar-losing credit default swap blunder. And suddenly, Washington hit the pause button on regulatory rollback. All it took was one reminder of how stupid even the best-run banks can be for everyone to recall that trusting these jokers to act responsibly is a losing game, and, wham, bank regulation was back in the news. Efforts to repeal various parts of the Dodd-Frank bank reform act halted, but more important, pundits and politicians are focusing a brand-new round of attention on the ongoing process of writing the “Volcker rule” into law.
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Andrew Leonard is a staff writer at Salon. On Twitter, @koxinga21. More Andrew Leonard.
GOP to modernity: Stop
For House Republicans, the less we know about our country and our planet, the better
House of Representatives Republican leadership (Credit: AP) Watching the antics of the House GOP, you get the very strong sense that if the class of Republicans elected in 2010 were offered a chance to repeal the Enlightenment, they would leap at the opportunity. The great flowering of science and philosophy that reached critical mass in the 17th century employed human reason to batter away at the dogmas of blind faith. But as far as the Tea Party seems to be concerned, that was just one big wrong turn.
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Andrew Leonard is a staff writer at Salon. On Twitter, @koxinga21. More Andrew Leonard.
How John Roberts sold us out
Jeffrey Toobin's Citzen's United blow-by-blow leaves no room for doubt: The "moneyed interests" have won
(Credit: Reuters/Larry Downing) Jeffrey Toobin’s New Yorker masterpiece “Money Unlimited: How Chief Justice John Roberts Orchestrated the Citizens United Decision” is required reading for anyone concerned with one of the central problems plaguing the functioning of American democracy: the influence of corporate spending on the political process.
If you’re impatient, you can skip ahead to the last, chilling line: “The Roberts Court, it appears, will guarantee moneyed interests the freedom to raise and spend any amount, from any source, at any time, in order to win elections.” And from there, you can make your own decision about whom to vote for this November, based on the direction that the Supreme Court is currently headed.
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Andrew Leonard is a staff writer at Salon. On Twitter, @koxinga21. More Andrew Leonard.