Six Problems the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau Should Tackle First

America needs to clean up student loans, make reverse mortgages easier to understand and crack down on payday loans. These problems and more await the soon-to-be-born Consumer Financial Protection Bureau

Student Loans

Six Problems the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau Should Tackle First

Izzy Schwartz / Photodisc / Getty Images

College and graduate-school attendees have two general sources of money when borrowing to pay for their education: government-backed loans and private loans provided by a bank or some other lender. The government-backed loans are almost always cheaper, but they are capped at about $5,000 per year. Nonetheless, many students will end up with private loans before they have maxed out what they can borrow through the government-guaranteed system. That's because brokers get paid more to sell private loans.

What's worse, many students end up leaving college with an amount of debt that they are never going to be able to afford. Lauren Saunders of the National Consumer Law Center says the CFPB should require schools to certify the loan packages being given to their students. She believes that many schools would rein in abusive practices if they had to sign off on them. "At the very least, the school would know what is going on," says Saunders.

See "For-Profit Colleges: Educators or Predators?"

View the full list for "Six Problems the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau Should Tackle First"