In 2003, the Department of Education (Education) proposed an
update to the state and other tax allowance, a part of the federal need
analysis for student financial aid. Most federal aid as well as some
state and institutional aid is awarded based on the student's cost of
attendance less the student's and/or family's ability to pay these
costs--known as the expected family contribution (EFC). The allowance,
which accounts for the amount of state and other taxes paid by students
and families, effectively reduces the EFC. Given the potential impact
of the allowance on the awarding of aid, we determined what factors
have affected the updating of the tax data on which it is based, the
effects the proposed 2003 update would have had on financial assistance
for aid applicants, any limitations in the method for deriving the
allowance, and strategies available to address them.
While Education has been required to revise the allowance annually since
1993, prior to 2004 it attempted to update the allowance only twice--in
1993 and again in 2003--but the latter update was suspended. As a
result, the 1988 IRS tax data used for the 1993 update remained in
effect. The lack of updates is primarily because Education did not
annually seek data needed to update the allowance or establish
effective internal control to guide the updating process. Also,
Education did not consider alternatives when data were not readily
available. Had the update been implemented in 2004-2005, the allowance
would have decreased for most states; as a result, the EFC would have
increased by about $500, on average, for a majority of aid applicants.
Of those with an EFC increase, 38 percent would either have received
less in Pell Grants ($144 less on average) or would have become
ineligible for them; the percentage of recipients affected would have
varied by income. Overall Pell Grant expenditures would have decreased
by $290 million. Increases in EFCs could also have affected other forms
of aid, including state aid; these effects in turn could have affected
Stafford loans and Parent Loans for Undergraduate Students. The impact
of the proposed update on Campus-Based, state, and institutional
need-based aid would likely have varied based on state and
institutional aid awarding policies and changes in state allowances.
Due to certain limitations of the IRS dataset with respect to
calculating the allowance, and problems with how Education uses this
dataset, the current allowance may not reflect the amount of taxes paid
by students and families. The dataset is limited because the taxpayers
included in it are generally not representative of aid applicants, it
does not include all state and other taxes paid by students and
families, and the tax data are several years older than the income
information reported by applicants on aid applications. In addition to
these limitations, Education does not make full use of the dataset to
better reflect the varying tax rates paid by taxpayers in different
income groups. Strategies we identified for addressing the limitations
of the tax allowance include (1) using IRS data with revisions to the
method for calculating the allowance, (2) substituting IRS data with
one of several alternative data sources, (3) using a standard allowance
for all aid applicants irrespective of state of residence, or (4)
collecting tax information directly from aid applicants. These could
require modest to substantial changes, would differ in their impact on
applicants and federal costs, and could require legislative changes
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