It's the start of another new year — a time for reflection, resolutions and W-4 filings.
What if — along with the federal, state, local, Social Security and Medicare taxes that are automatically withheld from every payroll check — student-loan borrowers could also have their payments extracted from that as well?
That's precisely what the New America Foundation, Young Invincibles and the National Association of Student Financial Aid Administrators are proposing in their recently published, thought-provoking report: The Case for Payroll Withholding — Preventing Student Loan Defaults with Automatic Income-Based Repayment.
As the report's subtitle suggests, the authors are attempting to tackle the twin issues of student-loan payment delinquencies and defaults — which occur with greater frequency and in greater numbers than for any other form of consumer borrowing — with an innovative twist on the oft-proposed solution of income-based repayment: Loan payments would be calculated on and withheld from a borrower's current paycheck.
The idea makes a lot of sense.
As the authors rightly point out, the present system is documentation-intensive (tax returns or other forms of income verification), repetitive (annually updated applications), manual (borrowers must remit their payments) and dated (calculations are based upon prior-year earnings). Consequently, whatever relief that is ultimately approved may not correspond with the borrower's current financial circumstances.
Yet, as well-intentioned as this idea may be, it still doesn't fully solve the problem.
For instance, take borrowers who are self-employed with sporadic earnings. How would their monthly payments be calculated and by whom? What about food servers who are often paid low-level salaries because of tips they may receive? And what about the employers? To what extent would a program that's uncomfortably analogous to wage garnishment come with added fiduciary responsibilities?
If anything, the fact that there is so great a need for income-based repayment plans — more than half of all borrowers whose loans are in repayment are unable to comply with the original terms of their financing agreements — should make plain the fundamental problem that underlies this contentious issue: Education loans are improperly structured from the get-go.
Given the magnitude of average student borrowing (public and private education-related debts, including from the use of credit cards) versus the relatively low level of earnings during the first several years of post-college life, it's no wonder that so many borrowers are struggling to meet the payment demands of the standard 10-year loan.