Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Commentary: Federal Student Loans as a Problem of Subsidiarity
Commentary: Federal Student Loans as a Problem of Subsidiarity
Mar 20, 2026 4:18 AM

“When loans are guaranteed by the state and detached from market forces and personal responsibility,” says Dylan Pahman in this week’s Acton Commentary, “those institutions being paid with that loan money experience inflated demand as everyone and anyone now can go and wants to go college. As a result, tuition prices have been inflated. The full text of his essay follows. Subscribe to the free, weekly Acton News & Commentary and other publications here.

Federal Student Loans: A Problem of Subsidiarity

byDylan Pahman

Ever see one of those used car ads that says, “Bad credit? Drive today!” The implication being that the dealer will happily arrange a loan regardless of the borrower’s credit history. For years now, the federal government has been running a similar scheme: “Poor student? Go to college anyway!” While this campaign has had better intentions behind it, it is no less of a problem. In the field of higher education, the federal government has usurped the roles of families, private organizations, and markets, with negative moral and economic consequences.

As students across the country begin a new school year, the Obama administration has put forward aplanfor student aid reform. In the president’s defense, he did not create the problem in question. The Higher Education Act began in 1965 as part of President Lyndon Johnson’s “Great Society.” At the time, it was a need-based program for the poor that centered mainly around Pell grants rather than loans. As time went on, Congress kept expanding the program, including the middle class, poor performing students who needed remedial courses, as well as students attending trade schools. At the same time, while many students in the 1970s received federal aid in the form of grants, by the 1980s and 1990s the form of aid had shifted primarily to loans.

The expansion of federally backed loans has altered the typical way the loan market works. When issuing a purely private loan, banks mitigate risk by setting an interest rate relative to the potential borrower’s credit and e as well as any other relevant factors. And if a person has bad credit or little prospect of being able to pay off the loan, the loan is denied in the first place.

With federal loans, however, the risk is mitigated by guaranteeing the loan with U.S. tax dollars, keeping interest rates artificially low. Thus, people who otherwise would be turned away and have to work on their savings and credit for a few years before starting college now can (and do) go straight from high school to college, often regardless of academic ability or financial health. At the same time, as the Obama plan itself admits, “The average tuition at a public four-year college has increased by more than 250 percent over the past three decades, while es for typical families grew by only 16 percent.”

Why might this be? When loans are guaranteed by the state and detached from market forces and personal responsibility, those institutions being paid with that loan money experience inflated demand as everyone and anyone now can go and wants to go college. As a result, tuition prices have been inflated. Indeed, the major shift has been “over the past three decades” as federal aid shifted from primarily limited, need-based grants to nearly indiscriminate loans. Yet, as the plan notes, “Loan default rates are rising, and too many young adults are burdened with debt as they seek to start a family, buy a home, launch a business, or save for retirement.” In addition, today student debtcollectivelyamounts to more than $1 trillion in a “higher-ed bubble” akin to the housing bubble that caused the 2008 crash. Whether or not the student loan bubble could cause another financial crisis is amatter of debateright now.

So what is the president’s solution to this problem? The plan is divided into the following three headings: “Paying for Performance,” “Promoting Innovation and Competition,” and “Ensuring that Student Debt Remains Affordable.”

Most of these are very good-intentioned goals. It is clear, in addition, that the Obama administration is sensitive to some of the inherent problems with federal loans: For example, the “Paying for Performance” section introduces greater accountability for students and institutions of higher education. While more data and transparency are not a bad thing, the plan’s standard of es for institutions is questionable: “graduation and transfer rates, graduate earnings, and advanced degrees of college graduates.” Tying money to graduation rates is just as much an incentive for grade inflation as it is for improving quality, potentially skewing individual student performance as well. And graduate earnings depend upon a whole host of variables that certainly cannot be reduced to what school a person graduated from.

The issues do not end there. When the plan says it will “encourage innovation by stripping away unnecessary regulations,” it later spells out what that really means: more online education, more MOOCs (Massive Open Online Course), expanding aid to petency-based education, and so on. Much of this is laudable, but the problem is that the list is selective. The federal government will deign to issue “deregulatory waivers” for any innovation it thinks worthwhile. But why not just deregulate in general and leave innovation to institutions’ discretion?

Indeed, the whole plan, though admirably attempting to address our student debt problem, is symptomatic of the problem itself: an overreach of federal authority in violation of subsidiarity. As Pope Pius XI wrote in his 1931 encyclicalQuadragesimo Anno, “The supreme authority of the State ought … to let subordinate groups handle matters and concerns of lesser importance, which would otherwise dissipate its efforts greatly.” Our student debt problem was caused by expansion of federal reach into the student loan market. Is it too scandalous to suggest that it might be better solved by scaling back federal involvement?

In this regard the Obama plan is thankfully not entirely silent, even if it is only mentioned as an afterthought: “Finally, the President will challenge leaders in states, philanthropy, and the private sector to make their mitments to improve college value while reducing costs.” For too long now, federal policy has been to start from the top and continually increase federal reach, and the results have led us into our current debacle. It would be better if instead of “finally,” the president prioritized a more subsidiary approach.

On the other hand, scaling back federal involvement for the sake of subsidiarity would require munities, churches, business leaders, and others to play a larger role. Whether it be by helping young adults get jobs so they can save for their educations, subsidizing tuition through philanthropy, or tutoring struggling students to learn better study habits, the greatest effect of reducing federal loans would not be financial but moral. It would create a greater need for people to find tangible ways to love their neighbors themselves instead of simply relegating that duty to the federal government. But isn’t that a cost those who advocate for higher education ought to be willing to pay?

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Byzantine Hymn for the Nativity of Christ
From the Holy Land, sung in Arabic. Merry Christmas to all PowerBlog readers and our blogging crew! St. Paul’s Letter to the Galatians 4:4-7 Brethren, when the time had e, God sent forth his Son, born of woman, born under the law, to redeem those who were under the law, so that we might receive adoption as sons. And because you are sons, God has sent the Spirit of his Son into our hearts, crying, “Abba! Father!” So you are...
Climate Babel
With all of the blizzards, cold temperatures and the circus-like atmosphere in Copenhagen last week, it looks like people are ing more and more skeptical of global warming—or I should say climate change. But in times like these we have to remember that blizzards, or even historical low temperatures, are irrelevant–because it is not LOCAL warming, it is GLOBAL warming. The only time LOCAL temperatures have any significance is when they are hotter than normal–then it es empirical evidence. I...
Not So Liberating: The Twilight of Liberation Theology
NRO’s Corner published my article on Pope Benedict’s recent remarks to Brazilian bishops on liberation theology: It went almost unnoticed, but on December 5, Benedict XVI articulated one of the most stinging rebukes of a particular theological school ever made by a pope. Addressing a visiting group of Brazilian bishops, Benedict followed some ments about Catholic education with some very sharp and deeply critical remarks about liberation theology and its effects upon the Catholic Church. After stressing how certain liberation...
Gladstone’s 200th Birthday
William Ewart Gladstone (1809-1898)The Mackinac Center notes that today is the 200th anniversary of the birth of British parliamentarian and statesman William Gladstone, and links to a 2003 article from the center’s president, Lawrence W. Reed. Reed points to Gladstone’s long and distinguished political career, which included multiple tenures as prime minister. What made this son of Scottish parents both great and memorable, however, was not simply a long career in government. Indeed, as a devoutly religious man he always...
Conventional vs. Cyber Terrorism
During this holiday travel season, which has you more concerned, conventional terror attacks of the kind attempted on Christmas Day or tech terrorism, which aims to take down access to or breach puter networks? John P. Avlon of the Manhattan Institute makes the case that the latter perhaps represents a greater threat to national and economic security. Avlon concludes, “Whether it is perpetrated by al-Qaida, a hostile nation, or a lone hacker, we cannot afford to wait for a digital...
The Incarnation and “the foolishness of God”
I love the song, “Mary, did you know?”… Reflect on the words… The Incarnation is at the heart of the Gospel– not just that Jesus came as the GodMan in bodily form, as the ultimate sin-bearer, as the Perfect High Priest offering Himself as the Perfect Sacrifice for our sins. Beyond that, consider the manner of the Incarnation– He didn’t just roll down here for a week, hop on a cross, and rise from the dead. He lived our kind...
John Calvin in Siouxland
As we enjoy the final days of 2009, notable for among other things the 500th anniversary of John Calvin’s birth, take the time to enjoy this video creation from James C. Schaap, professor of English at Dordt College, featuring quotes about creation from the writings of John Calvin, music by the Dordt College Concert Choir, and photography by Schaap. As Calvin writes, “Nothing is so obscure or contemptible, even in the smallest corners of the earth, that it can’t display...
Robby George and the Reformation on Reason
Ryan T. Anderson, editor of the Witherspoon Institute’s Public Discourse, takes note of an in-depth NYT profile of Prof. Robby George (HT: MoJ). In the NYT profile, George is presented as the central figure in the formation of the ecumenical coalition behind the Manhattan Declaration, and adds a number of important contexts for George’s academic, intellectual, and political endeavors. Anderson characterizes the profile as “pretty evenhanded,” saying it “provides a nice overview of the academic and political work that George...
Column: Christmas message should inform environmentalism
In a new column in The Detroit News, I set authentic environmental stewardship against the goings-on at the recently concluded UN Copenhagen conference. A slightly longer version of mentary will be published tomorrow in the weekly Acton News & Commentary. Merry Christmas to all! The not-so-subtle politicizing of science revealed by the Climategate affair, along with the alarmist and at times downright silly antics of some proponents of environmentalism (a word that has acquired numerous shades of mitment), ought not...
What Would Jesus Drive? A Cadillac, of course!
There’s a new answer to the question, “What would Jesus drive?”, a contention that won’t sit well with the environmental activists who first raised the question. The inevitably revisionist logic of the prosperity gospel has to hold that “Jesus couldn’t have been poor because he received lucrative gifts — gold, frankincense and myrrh — at birth. Jesus had to be wealthy because the Roman soldiers who crucified him gambled for his expensive undergarments. Even Jesus’ parents, Mary and Joseph, lived...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved