It's Not Just Students — With Higher Ed Loans, Feds Profiting Off Parents, Too

Providing yet another example of why higher education should be free across the U.S., a new Politico investigation reveals how the federal government’s Parents PLUS lending program has much higher interest rates and fees, and far fewer opportunities for loan forgiveness or reductions, than even the regular student loans driving the nation’s debt crisis.

“Parent PLUS was created in 1980 to provide small loans to help reasonably well-off families finance the American Dream of an undergraduate education,” explains Politico journalist Michael Grunwald.

“But in an era of skyrocketing education costs, it has grown to look a lot like publicly funded predatory lending, providing almost any borrowers with almost unlimited cash to attend any school with almost no regard to their ability to repay,” he writes. “Thirteen percent of undergraduates now rely on Parent PLUS, and many of their parents are falling into debt traps.”

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