Government’s Direct Lending Program Sees 43-Percent Increase in Volume
As cash-strapped lenders continue to drop out of the Federal Family
Education Loan Program, the number of student loans originated for the 2008–09 school year through the government’s Direct Loan Program has increased by 43 percent, reports The
Chronicle of Higher Education (“As ‘Crisis’ Deters Loan Companies, Direct Lending Sees 43-Percent Jump,” Sept.
2, 2008).
Lenders in the FFEL Program — through which borrowers take out federal student loans through private, third-party lenders including banks,
state agencies, and nonprofit lenders — have generally accounted for 80 percent of all federal student loan volume, according to the House Committee on Education and Labor (“The College Loan Landscape,” March 2008).
But the Direct Loan Program, which provides loans to students and parents directly from the Department of Education, is gaining ground. As of August 8, the
Direct Loan Program had already originated more than $10.84 billion in federal student loans at 1,156 colleges and universities. At this
time last year, the direct-lending program, had originated just $7.55 billion in loans at 851 institutions.
And although the exact figures have yet to be released, the Education Department estimates that the Direct Loan Program, which has generally
made up 20 percent of all federal college loan volume, will soon be comparable in size to the FFEL program. FFELP lenders have only issued
$13 billion in federal student loans at 3,230 colleges and universities this academic year, compared to the $55.8 billion in student loans
they originated at 4,612 schools last year.
So Far, A Smooth Transition to Direct Lending
Government subsidy cuts to FFELP lenders enacted by the College Cost Reduction and Access Act last September, as
well as continued fallout from the subprime mortgage crisis, have led more than 100 lenders to suspend their participation in the FFEL
program.
By April of this year, some 5.8 percent of lenders remaining in the FFEL program had switched over to the direct-lending program and another
19.3 percent said they were considering the switch, according to Student Lending
Analytics, a company that provides financial aid administrators with data about lenders (“Drift Toward Direct Lending (Update),” Inside Higher Ed, April
30, 2008).
Although some lenders questioned the Education Department’s ability to handle an increase in loan volume through its Direct Loan Program,
some financial aid administrators say the Department of Education has done well in handling the influx of business.
Anna Griswold, executive director of student aid and assistant vice president for undergraduate education at Penn State, says she has been
“pretty pleased” with the Direct Loan Program and has not experienced any glitches. Penn State, the 10th-largest FFELP lender last year, became a
direct-lending school this year after its FFELP lender, the Pennsylvania Higher Education Assistance Agency, stopped offering federal
student loans in February.
Penn State borrowers have already taken out $100 million in student loans this year through the direct-lending program.