Apparently the US government departments in charge of the student loan program were basically committing Enron level accounting fraud since the 1990s. This is wild lmao.
Total estimated shortfall compared to the cooked numbers is half a trillion USD.
Also, you literally do not need to know anything about finance to understand that retrieving 90% of the value of loans that people defaulted on with no collateral is not happening, ever.
Months later, Jeff Courtney, a former JPMorgan executive, arrived in Washington. And that’s when the trouble started.
According to a report he later produced, over three decades, Congress, various administrations and federal watchdogs had systematically made the student loan program look profitable when in fact defaults were becoming more likely.
The result, he found, was a growing gap between what the books said and what the loans were actually worth, requiring cash infusions from the Treasury to the Education Department long after budgets had been approved and fiscal years had ended, and potentially hundreds of billions in losses.
The federal budget assumes the government will recover 96 cents of every dollar borrowers default on. That sounded high to Mr. Courtney because in the private sector 20 cents would be more appropriate for defaulted consumer loans that aren’t backed by an asset.
In reality, the government is likely to recover just 51% to 63% of defaulted amounts, according to Mr. Courtney’s forecast in a 144-page report of his findings, which was reviewed by The Wall Street Journal.
Total estimated shortfall compared to the cooked numbers is half a trillion USD.
Also, you literally do not need to know anything about finance to understand that retrieving 90% of the value of loans that people defaulted on with no collateral is not happening, ever.