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Chingos, Matthew; Delisle, Jason; Cohn, Jason – Urban Institute, 2023
The new student loan repayment plan formally proposed by the Biden administration would let borrowers make lower payments and have remaining loans forgiven sooner than under current plans. Under the proposed income-driven repayment (IDR) plan, most undergraduate borrowers with typical debt levels--and nearly 90 percent of those with certificates…
Descriptors: College Students, Loan Repayment, Student Loan Programs, Undergraduate Students
Baum, Sandy; Delisle, Jason – Urban Institute, 2022
Much of the policy debate emerging from concerns over student debt has focused on the structure and operation of income-driven repayment (IDR). As the number of available IDR plans and the share of borrowers enrolling in these plans has increased, the system has become more confusing and difficult to navigate. IDR has not prevented default…
Descriptors: Income, Loan Repayment, Paying for College, Student Loan Programs
Delisle, Jason; Cohn, Jason – Urban Institute, 2022
Policymakers enacted a series of reforms in the mid-2000s that significantly expanded benefits in the federal student loan program for students pursuing graduate degrees. These reforms allow students to borrow up to the full cost of attendance for their degrees and use an Income-Driven Repayment (IDR) program that offers loan forgiveness after 20…
Descriptors: Masters Degrees, Debt (Financial), Wages, Income
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Delisle, Jason; Holt, Alexander – Education Next, 2017
The world of student loans and debt forgiveness for teachers is a patchwork of overlapping programs, contradictory regulations, and expensive subsidies that date back to Dwight D. Eisenhower's signing of the National Defense Education Act of 1958. The 60-year experiment in using federal loan dollars to encourage students to become teachers could…
Descriptors: Student Loan Programs, Debt (Financial), Federal Aid, Educational Legislation
Akers, Beth; Dancy, Kim; Delisle, Jason – Manhattan Institute for Policy Research, 2019
In 2015, Lumina Foundation introduced the Rule of Ten, a new method for assessing college affordability for students in the U.S. The rule rests on the assumption that an "affordable" cost for college should not exceed the total of: (1) what a student and his family can save by putting away 10% of their income for the 10 years before…
Descriptors: Student Costs, Paying for College, Debt (Financial), Student Loan Programs
Delisle, Jason; Holt, Alexander – New America, 2015
For all the attention student loans have received in the media and from policymakers in recent years, there is still remarkably little information on why and how borrowers struggle to repay them. Rising college prices and debt levels explain some of the troubles borrowers have with their loans, as does a slow economic recovery that has caused…
Descriptors: Focus Groups, Student Loan Programs, Loan Repayment, Paying for College
Burd, Stephen; Carey, Kevin; Delisle, Jason; Fishman, Rachel; Holt, Alex; Laitinen, Amy; McCann, Clare – New America Foundation, 2013
The federal financial aid system is no longer up to today's demands. Built in a different era, its haphazard evolution over the decades has made it inefficient, poorly targeted, and overly complicated. With the need for higher education never greater and college growing increasingly unaffordable, students deserve a streamlined aid system that is…
Descriptors: Student Financial Aid, Federal Government, Higher Education, Incentives
Delisle, Jason – New America Foundation, 2012
The 2011 Occupy Wall Street protests brought countless media reports about unemployed college graduates struggling to repay their student loans and headlines sounding alarms that outstanding student loan debt will soon reach $1 trillion. Even though evidence is mixed on whether today's college graduates leave school with significantly more debt…
Descriptors: College Graduates, Grants, Student Loan Programs, Politics of Education
Delisle, Jason – New America Foundation, 2008
In an ongoing debate about the relative costs of the federal government's direct and guaranteed student loan programs, some budget experts and private lenders have argued for the use of "market cost" estimates. They assert that official government cost estimates for federal student loans differ from what private entities would likely charge…
Descriptors: Public Agencies, Student Loan Programs, Costs, Expertise
Delisle, Jason; Luebchow, Lindsey; Rieman, Heather – New America Foundation, 2008
Next week, President George W. Bush will submit his eighth and final budget request to the Congress. How has he fared with respect to education budget proposals thus far? Answer: although President Bush made the No Child Left Behind Act, which deals with elementary and secondary education, the hallmark of his education policy, from a federal…
Descriptors: Educational Finance, Federal Aid, Budgets, Presidents