speeches · March 3, 2015
Regional President Speech
William C. Dudley · President
FEDERAL RESERVE BANK of NEW YORK ServingtheSecondDistrictandtheNation
SPEECH
Opening Remarks at the Convening on Student Loan Data Conference
March 4, 2015
William C. Dudley, President and Chief Executive Officer
Remarks at the Convening on Student Loan Data Conference, Federal Reserve Bank of New York, New York City
As prepared for delivery
Good morning. I’m happy to welcome you to the New York Fed for this workshop that is intended to increase our understanding
of student debt and how it affects individuals, their families and the economy. I am delighted to see such widespread and growing
interest in this important topic. Making continued progress on understanding these issues will depend critically on efforts to
identify and address existing data gaps that hamper its study. I am particularly happy to welcome Deputy Secretary Sarah Bloom
Raskin, who has spoken frequently and eloquently in the past about the need for improvements in student loan servicing and debt
collection, the macroeconomic consequences of increased student debt, and the need for better data and analysis. I look forward
to her remarks today.
Before I make some specific comments on student debt, let me take a step back and say a few words on household finance more
generally. As always, what I say represents my own views and not necessarily those of the Federal Open Market Committee or the
Federal Reserve System.1
There are several reasons the New York Fed has increased its focus on household finance. First, the financial crisis made it
obvious that an ability to understand and anticipate what is happening in the household sector is essential to gauging the strength
and resiliency of the U.S. economy. Second, our policy actions are intended to change the incentives facing households, so it is
important to be able to gauge how our policies are transmitted into household financial decisions. Good information on
household borrowing, for example, allows us to see how monetary policy affects outcomes such as auto loan originations. Third,
better household finance research helps support our community outreach and development missions.
A major challenge to achieving these goals is that household finances have traditionally been poorly documented. We have lots of
information about corporate sector debt and equity, but comparable basic facts about the household sector are much harder to
come by. For example, the lack of timely, comprehensive data made it more difficult to understand how vulnerable the household
sector’s financial position had become by 2007.
I’m happy to say that we’ve made progress in beginning to close this data gap. At the New York Fed, we’ve been able to develop
products that support a much better understanding of the household sector’s borrowing behavior, ranging from loan-level
mortgage information to credit card utilization and borrowing limits. This has greatly improved our knowledge of household debt
burdens, new borrowing activity, debt repayment as well as delinquencies. We’ve made a point of passing along these insights to
the public through our Quarterly Report on Household Debt and Credit, various blog posts and interactive online maps of
mortgage delinquencies. It has required a substantial commitment of resources to obtain the data and extract the information
from them, but I’m convinced that it’s been the right course of action.
Which brings me to the subject of today’s workshop: student loans.
As you know, student debt is an increasingly important form of credit both for households and for the economy. In 2010,
aggregate outstanding student loan balances surpassed credit card indebtedness, and in 2013 eclipsed a trillion dollars. During
the historic household deleveraging that took place between 2008 and 2013, student debt bucked the trend, and was the only form
of household credit that continued to increase each year.
There are many reasons for this growth, some of which are well-documented—including increasing numbers of individuals who
are pursuing post-secondary education, increasing durations in school and higher tuitions. A less well-known contributor to the
growing student debt balances was highlighted recently by a team of New York Fed economists.2 Using credit bureau data that
track the quarterly balance and payment status of student loans, they have shown that the overall rate of repayment of outstanding
student loans is very low, with many borrowers being delinquent on their loans.
Now, it’s probably fair to say that each form of household debt has distinctive features. A researcher must understand these
differences in order to understand the role that a particular kind of debt plays in household decision-making. But student debt is
perhaps the most distinctive form. Let me explain what I mean.
Unlike virtually all other forms of credit, student loans are generally not underwritten: they are frequently offered to young
borrowers who have little or no credit history and little to no current income. The amount of credit extended, on average, runs in
the tens of thousands of dollars. These loans are also not collateralized, nor are the interest rates risk-based. However, lenders
(now primarily the taxpayers), are given additional security in that student loans, unlike other forms of debt, are not dischargeable
in bankruptcy. This also means that delinquent student loans tend to remain on a borrower’s credit record long after the borrower
has stopped making payments, thus leading to very high measured rates of delinquency. In addition, many special programs exist
to allow borrowers to postpone repayment on their student loans to an extent not available for other kinds of household lending.
New York Fed economists have shown that for the 2009 cohort of graduates, only 17 percent of their original debt had been paid
down after five years.3 More than 20 percent of high-balance student borrowers owe more now than when they graduated in
2009. For the 2005 cohort of graduates, only 38 percent of their original student debt had been paid down, on average, nearly ten
years after graduation.
These loans are used to finance human capital investment projects with returns that are highly uncertain. It’s true that virtually
every study finds that the returns on college degrees are high, on average, relative to their cost. But some people who take out
student loans don’t end up with these high average returns. The net returns for some may, in fact, be negative. For example,
many who have pursued vocational training may be less remunerated in the market. Similarly, some students attend certain for-
profit universities with track records that indicate that their graduates have lower lifetime earnings than other types of educational
institutions. While others drop out before receiving a degree—just 59 percent of the 2006 cohort had received their four-year
degree by 2012. Of course, uncertain returns are a feature of most investments, but for other loan types this uncertainty is
generally managed more effectively through credit underwriting, collateralization and risk-based interest rates.
We are fairly confident in the aggregate statistics—over a trillion dollars in loan balances outstanding, 43 million borrowers and
the highest delinquency rates of any form of household debt. But we know a lot less about the precise causes and consequences of
the heterogeneity in the net returns to educational investments that I just described. What we know so far, based on very
imperfect data, suggests that this heterogeneity is likely to be very important. We have gained an increasing understanding that
how we finance post-secondary education has significant effects on a variety of critical economic outcomes, including economic
growth and inequality. For example, our research suggests that higher student debt and delinquencies reduce household
formation and depress homeownership.
But there are many important questions still left unanswered. What is the relationship between the amount and type of
educational investment that people make and their outcomes? What attributes are associated with borrowers who are more
successful at repaying their student loans? Are there particular types of degrees that are associated with better performance with
respect to student debt repayment or with better living standards earlier in life? What are the best interventions to help borrowers
avoid the consequences of delinquency and default, and to limit any default costs to taxpayers? Do borrowers who use programs
like income-based repayment eventually succeed in paying off their debts? How do income-based repayment programs affect
important decisions such as labor supply, consumption and household formation?
These are important questions for the nation, as the human capital of our citizens is far and away our most important asset, and
student loans are an important mechanism for financing needed investments in that asset. But it is very hard to answer these
questions with existing data. We need to link information on borrower decisions about the kind and amount of education they
receive to long-run outcomes for them and for the overall economy.
So I commend to you the work before you—finding new ways to get the information that policymakers need to answer important
questions about how we finance higher education. I look forward to your insights and recommendations.
1 Andrew Haughwout, Joseph Tracy and Wilbert van der Klaauw assisted in preparing these remarks.
2 ,3 Payback Time? Measuring Progress on Student Debt Repayment
Cite this document
APA
William C. Dudley (2015, March 3). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20150304_william_c_dudley
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20150304_william_c_dudley,
author = {William C. Dudley},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2015},
month = {Mar},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20150304_william_c_dudley},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}