Bill

BILL • US SENATE

S 3761

Student Loan Bond Expansion Act of 2026

119th Congress
Introduced by Bill Cassidy, Chuck Grassley, Tina Smith and 1 other co-sponsors

S. 3761 expands state authority to issue bonds backed by student loan revenues, increasing capital for lending but concentrating repayment risk in state finances.

Introduced in Senate
0
1
Bill Summary • S 3761

Legislative bill overview

S. 3761 expands the authority for states to issue bonds backed by student loan repayment revenues, increasing the capital available for student lending programs. The bill modifies existing provisions governing student loan asset-backed securities and state bonding capacity to facilitate greater borrowing against future student loan payments.

Why is this important

Student loan bonds allow states to raise substantial funds for education financing by using expected loan repayments as collateral. Expanding this mechanism could increase access to credit for borrowers and provide states with additional revenue tools, though it also concentrates repayment risk in bond markets and affects how federal student aid dollars flow through financial systems.

Potential points of contention

  • Debt concentration risk: Tying state finances to student loan repayment performance creates vulnerability if borrowers default en masse or economic conditions worsen, potentially affecting state bond ratings and borrowing costs
  • Profit incentives: Expanding bond programs may create financial incentives to prioritize lending to higher-income borrowers with better repayment prospects over broader access objectives
  • Federal coordination: The bill's interaction with federal student loan programs, income-driven repayment plans, and loan forgiveness initiatives remains unclear and could create conflicting incentives

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Key Provisions Impacts Timeline
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