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Indentured Servitude for Seniors:
Social Security Garnished for Student Debts
By Ellen Brown
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, May 15, 2012
The Social Security program…represents our commitment as a
society to the belief that workers should not live in dread that a
disability, death, or old age could leave them or their families
destitute. -- President Jimmy Carter,
December 20, 1977. [This law] assures the elderly that
America will always keep the promises made in troubled times a half
century ago…[The Social Security Amendments of 1983 are] a monument to the
spirit of compassion and commitment that unites us as a people.
-- President Ronald Reagan, April 20, 1983.
*** So said Presidents Carter and Regan, but that was
before 1996, when Congress voted to allow federal agencies to offset
portions of Social Security payments to collect debts owed to those
agencies. (31 U.S.C. §3716). Now we read of
horror stories like this:
I’m a 68 year old grandma of 2 young grandchildren. I went to college
to upgrade my employment status in 1998 or 1999. I finished in 2000 and at
that time had a student loan balance of about 3500.00.
Could not find a job and had to request forbearance to carry me. Over
the years I forgot about the loan, dealt with poor health, had brain
surgery in 2006 and the collection agents decided to collect for the loan
in 2008.
At no time during the 6-7 year gap did anyone remind me or let me know
that I could make a minimum payment on the loan. Now that I am on Social
Security (have been since I was 62), they have decided to garnishee my SS
check to the tune of 15%.
I have not been employed since 2004 and have the two dependents . . . .
I don’t dispute that I owed them the $3500.00 but am wondering why they
let it build up to somewhere around $17,000/20,000 before they attempted
to collect.
Her debt went from $3500 to over $17,000 in 10 years?! How could
that be? It seems that Congress has
removed nearly every consumer protection from student loans, including
not only standard bankruptcy protections, statutes of limitations, and
truth in lending requirements, but protection from usury (excessive
interest). Lenders can vary the interest rates, and some borrowers
are reporting
rates
as high as 18-20%. At 20%, debt doubles in just 3-1/2 years; and
in 7 years, it quadruples. Congress has also given lenders draconian
collection powers to extort not just the original principal and interest
on student loans but huge sums in penalties, fees, and collection costs.
The majority of these debts are being imposed on young people, who have
a potential 40 years of gainful employment ahead of them to pay the debt
off. But a sizeable chunk of U.S. student loan debt is
held by senior citizens, many of whom are not only unemployed but
unemployable. According to the New York Federal Reserve, two million
U.S. seniors age 60 and over have student loan debt, on which they owe a
collective $36.5 billion; and 11.2 percent of this debt is in default.
Almost a third of all student loan debt is held by people aged 40 and
over, and 4.2% is held by people over the age of 60. The total
student debt is now over $1 trillion, more even than credit card debt.
The sum is unsustainable and threatens to be the next debt tsunami.
Some of this debt is for loans taken out years earlier on their own
schooling, and some is from co-signing student loans for children or
grandchildren. But much of it has been incurred by middle-aged
people going back to school in the hope of finding employment in a bad job
market. What they have wound up with is something much worse: no
job, an exponentially mounting debt that cannot be discharged in
bankruptcy, and the prospect of old age without a social security check
adequate to survive on. Gone is the promise of earlier presidents
of a “commitment to the belief that workers should not live in dread that
a disability, death, or old age could leave them or their families
destitute.” The plight of the indebted elderly is reminiscent of the
Irish immigrants who came to America after a potato famine in the 19th
century, who were looked upon in some places as actually lower than
slaves. Plantation owners kept their slaves fed, clothed and cared for,
because they were valuable property. The Irish were expendable, and
they were on their own.2 It is obviously not a good time to raise
interest rates on student debt, but they are
set to double on July 1, 2012, to 6.8%. Many lawmakers in both
parties agree that the current 3.4% rates should be extended for another
year, but they can’t agree on how to find the $6 billion that this would
cost. Republicans want to take the money from a health care fund that
promotes preventive care; Democrats want to eliminate some tax benefits
for small business owners. Congress cannot agree on $6 billion to
save the students, yet they managed to agree in a matter of days in
September 2008 to come up with $700 billion to save the banks; and the
Federal Reserve found many trillions more. Estimates are
that
tuition could be provided free to students for a mere $30 billion
annually. The government has the power to find $30 billion -- or
$300 billion or $3 trillion -- in the same place the Federal Reserve found
it: it can simply issue the money. Congress is empowered by the
Constitution to “coin money” and “regulate the value thereof,” and no
limit is set on the face amount of the coins it creates. It could issue a
few one-billion dollar coins, deposit them in an account, and start
writing checks.
But wouldn’t that be inflationary?
No. The Fed’s own figures show that the money supply (M3) has shrunk
by $3 trillion since 2008. That sum could be added back into the
economy without inflating prices. Gas and food are going up today,
but the whole range of prices must be considered in order to determine
whether price inflation is occurring. Housing and wages are
significantly larger components of the price structure than commodities,
and they remain severely depressed.
There is another way the government could find needed funds without
raising taxes, slashing services, or going further into debt: Congress
could re-finance the federal debt through the Federal Reserve,
interest-free.
Canada did this
from 1939 to 1974, keeping its national debt low and sustainable while
funding massive programs including seaways, roadways, pensions, and
national health care. The national debt shot up only when the
government switched from borrowing from its own central bank to borrowing
from private lenders at interest.
The rationale was that borrowing bank-created money from the
government’s own central bank inflated the money supply, while borrowing
existing funds from private banks did not. But even the
Federal Reserve acknowledges that private banks create the money they
lend on their books, just as central banks do. U.S. taxpayers now
pay nearly half a trillion dollars annually to finance our federal debt.
The cumulative figure comes to $8.2 trillion paid in interest just in the
last 24 years. By financing the debt itself rather than paying
interest to private parties, the government could divert what it would
have paid in interest into tuition, jobs, infrastructure and social
services, allowing us to keep the social contract while at the same time
stimulating the economy. For students, at the very least
the bankruptcy option needs to be reinstated, usury laws restored,
predatory practices eliminated, and the cost of education brought back
down to earth. One possibility for relieving the burden on students
would be to give them interest-free loans. The government of New
Zealand now offers 0%
loans to New Zealand students, with repayment to be made from their
income after they graduate. For the past twenty years,
the Australian government has also successfully funded students by giving
out what are in effect interest-free loans.
The loans in the Australian Higher
Education Loan Programme (or HELP) do not bear interest, but the
government gets back more than it lends, because the principal is
indexed to the Consumer Price Index (CPI), which goes up every year.
Predatory lenders are keeping us in debt peonage through
misguided economics and bank-captured legislators. We have people
who desperately want to work, to the point of going back to school to try
to improve their chances; and we have mountains of work that needs to be
done. The only thing keeping them apart is that artificial
constraint called “money”, which we have allowed to be created by banks
and let out at interest when it could have been created by public
institutions for public purposes, either by direct issuance or through
publicly-owned banks. We just need to recognize our oppressors and
throw off their yoke, and the good times can roll again.
Ellen Brown is an attorney and president of the Public
Banking Institute,
http://PublicBankingInstitute.org. In Web of Debt, her latest of
eleven books, she shows how a private cartel has usurped the power to
create money from the people themselves, and how we the people can get it
back. Her websites are http://WebofDebt.com
and http://EllenBrown.com.
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