"As overall student loan indebtedness in the United States has increased over the years, many
borrowers have found themselves unable to repay their student loans. Ordinarily, declaring
bankruptcy is a means by which a debtor may discharge—that is, obtain relief from—debts he is
unable to repay. However, Congress, based upon its determination that allowing debtors to freely
discharge student loans in bankruptcy could threaten the student loan program, has limited the
circumstances in which a debtor may discharge a student loan. Under current law, a debtor may
not discharge a student loan unless repaying the student loan would impose an “undue hardship”
upon the debtor and his dependents.
The Bankruptcy Code does not define “undue hardship,” and the legislative history of the
relevant statutory provision does not precisely specify how courts should determine whether a
debtor qualifies for an undue hardship discharge. The task of interpreting this statutory term has
consequently fallen to the federal judiciary. Courts, however, have disagreed regarding exactly
what a debtor must prove in order to discharge a student loan on undue hardship grounds..."
Bankruptcy and students loans
Tuesday, July 23, 2019
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