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by musicale 1886 days ago
Although it is harder to discharge student loans in bankruptcy, as I understand it they can be discharged in bankruptcy if the borrower can prove undue hardship (probably hard to do, especially with income-based repayment) or if 7 years have elapsed since the start of repayment.

This does seem to violate the spirit of bankruptcy law as well as basic economics (presumably student loans consist of and are repaid with the same dollars that are used for other loans or unsecured debt) and has almost certainly helped universities raise tuition with impunity for decades while student loan debt has ballooned to more than $1T in the US.

3 comments

The reasons you make allusions to education debt in a contract like this is that students have priors about whether student loans are dischargeable, and the company wants to capitalize on those priors. That's the deception.
You can thank a truly gross lobbying effort that culminated in a bill[0] passed in 2005 intended to curb "bankruptcy abuse" (a thing that was not actually a thing), and, among other things, greatly restricted how educational loans could be discharged in bankruptcy.

[0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bankruptcy_Abuse_Prevention_an...

> if the borrower can prove undue hardship (probably hard to do, especially with income-based repayment)

Yeah, it's pretty hard to do. You have to have an "adversarial proceeding" (i.e. a lawyer from the Department of Education or whoever shows up and argues against you).