Lending A Hand: A Report On The Lobbying Expenditures and Political Contributions of the Five Largest Student Loan CorporationsThe student loan industry, a $40 billion dollar-a-year market, is dominated by federally subsidized lenders. These lenders recei
10/31/2002
Executive Summary
The student loan industry,
a $40 billion dollar-a-year market, is dominated by federally subsidized lenders.
These lenders receive millions each year in subsidies from the federal government
in addition to income from loan interest payments. This report documents the
political spending of the five largest holders of federally subsidized student
loans, namely Sallie Mae, the Student Loan Corporation of Citibank (a subsidiary
of Citigroup), First Union National Bank, Wells Fargo Education Financial Services,
and the National Education Loan Network (Nelnet).
The student loan industry
has experienced rapid growth in recent years, as increasingly higher numbers
of students borrow to finance their college education. At four year public colleges,
annual borrowing rose 65 percent from 1992-1993 to 1999-2000.
As the student loan market
has expanded, the student loan industry as a whole has increased its involvement
in the political process by increasing political contributions and lobbying
expenditures.
Some key findings in this
report include:
• Political spending by
the top five student loan corporations, including lobbying expenditures, totaled
almost $60 million over the last three election cycles.
• Employees of the top five
student lenders contributed more than $1.1 million to the political process
during the last three election cycles in direct hard money contributions to
candidates, donations to candidate and issue Political Action Committees (PACs),
and contributions to political parties.
• The top five lenders’
PACs contributed more than $3.7 million to federal candidates over the last
three election cycles.
• Soft money contributions
from the five largest student lenders totaled almost $5 million for the last
three election cycles. Sallie Mae’s soft money contributions for the 2002 cycle
so far total almost $300,000, more than tripling its total soft money spending
in the 2000 cycle.
• Lobbying expenditures
accounted for more than 80 percent of the lenders’ political budget, with the
top five lenders spending $49.4 million on lobbying over the last three election
cycles. Sallie Mae and Citigroup (parent company of Citibank) spent more than
$42.9 million in lobbying expenditures during this period, accounting for almost
90 percent of the top five lenders’ lobbying expenditures.
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