For-Profit Schools as Covered Persons under the CFPA

Marsha Lawler, Michelle Dold
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Abstract

A cornerstone of for-profit schools’ business model is to encourage students to borrow as much as possible to finance their college attendance. After drawing people in with misleading advertisements, for-profit colleges quickly hand prospective students off to financial aid officers who rush students through the process of explaining the financial aid system—if they explain it at all. These employees drive students to take on massive federal and private debt loads, including loans that the school itself originates. They will sometimes fill out or even fraudulently sign forms on students’ behalf, all the while insisting that they are working in the students’ interest. Each of these tactics has one goal: boosting schools’ revenues by inflating students’ debt balances, regardless of how unmanageable those loans are likely to be for borrowers.This issue brief argues that each of these areas of conduct place for-profit colleges squarely within the authority of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), and that the Bureau can therefore intervene to protect borrowers. The CFPB’s authorizing statute states that anyone providing a consumer financial product or service is a “covered person” and therefore falls under the Bureau’s purview, including with respect to the prohibition on unfair, deceptive, and abusive acts and practices. As this issue brief outlines, each one of the common features of the for-profit college business model described above is alone sufficient to make a for-profit college a “covered person,” including the practices of lending to students through institutional loan programs, brokering student loans through third parties, and providing students financial advisory services in the financial aid process (regardless of the quality of the advice).With for-profit college enrollment surging due to COVID, the need to rein in the industry has never been more pressing. The CFPB has the tools to combat the rampant illegal practices that the for-profit college industry relies on.
以营利为目的的学校作为受保对象
营利性学校商业模式的一个基石是鼓励学生尽可能多地借钱来支付大学学费。在用误导性的广告吸引人们之后,营利性大学迅速将潜在的学生交给经济援助官员,后者催促学生通过解释经济援助制度的过程——如果他们能解释的话。这些员工迫使学生承担巨额的联邦和私人债务,包括学校自己发放的贷款。他们有时会以学生的名义填写表格,甚至欺骗性地签署表格,同时坚称他们是在为学生的利益而工作。这些策略都有一个目标:通过增加学生的债务余额来增加学校的收入,而不管这些贷款对借款人来说可能有多难以管理。本问题简要地认为,这些行为领域中的每一个都将营利性大学完全置于消费者金融保护局(CFPB)的权力范围内,因此该局可以进行干预以保护借款人。CFPB的授权法规规定,任何提供消费者金融产品或服务的人都是“受保护的人”,因此属于CFPB的职权范围,包括禁止不公平、欺诈和滥用行为和做法。正如本期简要概述的那样,上述盈利性大学商业模式的每一个共同特征都足以使盈利性大学成为“被覆盖的人”,包括通过机构贷款项目向学生贷款的做法,通过第三方中介学生贷款,以及在经济援助过程中为学生提供财务咨询服务(无论建议的质量如何)。随着营利性大学入学人数因新冠肺炎而激增,控制该行业的必要性从未像现在这样紧迫。CFPB拥有打击营利性大学行业所依赖的猖獗的非法行为的工具。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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