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Ms. Rebecca Chang of Plano, Texas entered our 2015 Ronald Weiss Scholarship competition, and was chosen by Mr. Weiss as having submitted the winning essay. Ms. Chang did a wonderful job! Congratulations to Rebecca! We would also like to thank all of you who entered the competition. Don't give up as we are holding the scholarship competition again in 2016.
2005 Bankruptcy Reforms: Private Student Loans and
Economics
by Rebecca Chang
If the decision were up to you, would you repeal the 2005
bankruptcy reforms as related to private student loans? Why or
why not?
The Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act of
2005 has tightened bankruptcy code so that no student loan may be
discharged in bankruptcy, federal or private, unless it can be
proven that repayment would cause "undue hardship". Federal loans
are not included in the scope of the question for this paper, for
good reason. These loans are easily obtained and far less
borrower screening is conducted than with private loans; thus, if
bankruptcy was an option, the same moral hazard problem that
undermined the mortgage market would likely also occur in the
student loan market. There are also innumerable loan repayment
and forgiveness options for federal loans, which has shielded
discharge limitations on this type of student loan from heavy
criticism.
On the other hand, lawmakers have brought attention to restoring
bankruptcy protections for private student loans, pointing to the
legislative protections retained in comparable areas such as
credit card debt and medical bills. There is, however, procedure
for filing for discharge of private student loans, under the
"undue hardship" wording of section 528(a)(8) of the bankruptcy
code. One could file under chapter 7 for discharge, or chapter 13
for debt restructuring. An adversary proceeding must be filed in
addition to the bankruptcy filing, and one would typically
undergo an undue hardship test such as the Brunner test. Any such
hardship test evaluates whether debt repayments prevent a minimum
standard of living from being reached, as well as if good faith
efforts have been made in repayment.
The abovementioned procedure for filing private student loan
bankruptcy elucidates how arduous and involved this process is,
as well as why it is infrequently pursued. The courts have also
in the past taken a hardline approach, and only recently have
they eased up slightly. The Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals in
2013 upheld a decision in Conway v. National Collegiate Trust to
use a "totality of circumstances" test, reviewing the past and
expected future financial resources of the debtor to determine
undue hardship. This established the precedence that a college
degree does not necessarily mean a debtor will have the necessary
financial resources in the future to avoid undue hardship, which
has typically been the argument used in the past when applying
the Brunner test and rejecting discharge requests for student
loans.
Given the direction the courts have been moving in, I would
recommend the repeal of the 2005 bankruptcy reforms with respect
to private student loans. Not only would it decrease the
financial and time burden associated with filing for bankruptcy
under section 528(a)(8), it would also return the financial
incentive for screening borrowers to banks and reduce moral
hazard. If bankruptcy is reinstated as an option, banks will have
a greater incentive to monitor and review borrowers, as if the
debtors go bankrupt, the bank will be forced to absorb the
ensuing losses. The high level of student debt in the United
States has been compared to the housing bubble. I would posit
that without bankruptcy protection legislation for student
debtors, this asset bubble will only be given more