https://wallstreetonparade.com/2013/09/citibanks-student-loan-debt-slaves-part-ii/


By Pam Martens: September 11, 2013


Elizabeth Warren Helped Lead the Fight to Create the Consumer Financial
Protection Bureau

In February of this year, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB),
the new Federal agency that Senator Elizabeth Warren fought so hard to
create against a tsunami of backlash from Wall Street and Republican ranks,
asked the public to comment on making college more affordable and to
describe their student loan experiences with private lenders. There was a
tidal wave of nearly 30,000 responses.

Public interest groups, nonprofit community programs, and thousands of
college graduates responded. The most tragic stories came from students who
augmented their Federal student loans with loans from the big Wall Street
banks like Citibank, a unit of the bailed out poster child for bad
behavior, Citigroup. Citibank borrowers tell horror stories of living
without heat, living on food donations from friends, and watching their
monthly student loan payment skyrocket without warning from $374 to
$1025.53.

The levels of stress and despair that ring out from these letters should
raise a cautionary red flag to every American with a conscience. These
young people are America’s future.

Two prominent themes emerge from this underreported but, nonetheless, epic
human suffering. First, students who took large private student loans from
Citibank frequently took the option of deferring the interest until after
graduation since they had no means of paying it before getting a full time
job. The students failed to understand the dramatic future impact of that
decision. On Federal Stafford loans, the Federal government pays the
interest while the student is in school. On private student loans, that
interest is added to the original principal (capitalized), creating a
future time bomb in terms of how much interest will eventually be due.

As James C. wrote to the CFPB: “The primary driver of private student loan
distress is the overall amount of loans that I have, and the amount of
interest that accrues on a daily basis. I have only had student loans for
roughly ten years, I began paying back roughly three years ago. I have had
60k in capitalized interest added to my $150k student loan debt. I feel
that there should be a cap in private student loan interest rates, and a
cap to the amount of money that can be capitalized.”

Linda F. reported that she had “paid approximately 50% of the original
balance and still owe more than I borrowed due to high interest rates and
the times I had to put loans in deferment or forbearance. Also, these loans
accumulated a significant amount of interest while I was in school…I take
responsibility for the debt I took on, but it was not my fault that my
industry (architecture and building) was taken down by the very banks that
I owe. I will be paying on these loans for most of my life…”

Linda F. references the second theme that is spread throughout the
complaints of the graduates. The Wall Street banks crushed the economy with
their implosion in 2008, leaving a scarcity of jobs for graduates. Many
graduates are now unemployed, underemployed, or working in low wage jobs.

Amanda B. reported that she “graduated with over 100,000 in student loan
dept [sic] from citibank that has recently been sold to discover. I have
been laid off twice since graduation, entering the job market in 2008 when
things started going downhill, economy wise. I currently make 400 a week
after taxes, and my student loan payment is 922 a month. That is over half
of my monthly income. I have luckily been able to pay it up until my recent
lay off, I have started a new job and will begin payments again in April. I
cant even think about the amount of debt that I have without feeling sick
to my stomach. And Ive told my parents not to expect grandkids until these
are paid off. I have a dream of starting a business and I cant take that
kind of risk with that debt. I went to college to follow my dreams and
college debt seems to be keeping me from my furture. It saddens me to think
I would have been better off without my education.”

Audrey C., who graduated in June 2009 with a 3.8 grade point average, told
the CFPB the following: “In September 2009, I was laid off from my full
time job. I couldn’t afford health insurance, and so when I broke my ankle
in December of 2009, requiring surgery and five months of physical therapy,
I considered bankruptcy for the first time — but couldn’t afford to file.
My unemployment checks barely covered the basics, and luckily some friends
owned a bakery or else I wouldn’t have eaten during that period. After I
healed, I struggled but made sure I always had work. While applying for
hundreds of jobs in my chosen field without calls back, I’ve worked one
low-wage job after another. While I’ve been promoted into management at
most of these jobs, I only recently took yet another low wage job that
actually provides health benefits — the first health care I’ve had since
2008. I’m still only making $15 an hour. At 22, I made the most money I
have ever made, before or since. I declared Chapter 7 bankruptcy this year
after being sued for $12k by Citibank — (which is $3k more than I made in
all of 2011)…”

At both online forums and in reports to the CFPB, graduates talk of being
hounded early in the morning, at night, and on the job by collection
agencies to whom Citibank has referred the job of collecting payments.
Graduates also express the sentiment that there is no regulatory body
attempting to rein in the abuses.

Aimee M. told the CFPB: “The private student loan industry is getting away
with torturing young adult’s lives. There is no supervision of the
corporations who provide private student loans. There is no supervision on
the application process, the credit check verification, the approval
amount, loan disbursement, or repayment…In my personal experience, Citibank
Private Student Loans has violated my rights as loan borrower…”

One aspect that has remained under the radar in terms of general public
awareness is that in a replay of the mortgage mess that took down the
housing market, Citibank could make irresponsible loans to students and
then hand them over to the U.S. government for payment. U.S. guaranteed
loans are called Federal Family Education Loans (FFEL). If a student
defaults, the federal government pays the bank and takes over the loan. The
federal government pays approximately 97% of the principal balance to the
lender. The federal government then owns the loan and the right to collect
payments on the loan.

On September 17, 2010, Citigroup announced that its Student Loan
Corporation (SLC) was going to “sell” $4.7 billion of these loans to the
Department of Education. (We’ve asked the Department of Education to
clarify what transpired in this transaction and will report on it when they
do.)

A number of students told the CFPB that they felt Citibank engaged in
irresponsible lending, effectively throwing large sums of money at
students. Allison L. reported: “By the end of my schooling, only $80,000
was actually for classes and books and school related fees, and $80,000 was
extra money. Citibank should not have lent the additional money to me, as I
documented that ‘I lived at home/with parents,’ and my tuition, books and
fees clearly did not cost as much as the amount that was dispensed.”

Brooke Densing of the Hope Center in Buffalo, New York, a program to help
with financial literacy and provide a legal clinic for borrowers, addressed
the impact on the college graduates’ health, writing: “…the stress and
social/psychological disconnect that happens once someone is in severe debt
has intense consequences on their health, quality of life, and their
economic well- being. Often, causing depression, anxiety, stress related
illnesses, etc…We used to be able to tell clients that going to college
breaks generational poverty; and 90% of people in generational poverty will
NEVER return to poverty in their lifetime if they graduate from college. We
can no longer guarantee economic success for students in America.”

In Part III tomorrow, we will look at the overall economic implications to
the country of having what should be the most energetic, creative and
ambitious members of our society feeling the hopelessness and desperation
of being a debt slave for decades of their working life.

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