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Why the Student Loan Interest Rate Debate Matters

Posted: 05/ 1/2012 12:57 pm

Part I of an ongoing series on student loans

The student loan interest rate debate has gone viral, and a result, it's taken over Congress.

This is great news, because if Congress does not act by July 1, interest rates on Subsidized Stafford Loans will double from 3.4 percent to 6.8 percent. Right now, Democrats and Republicans in the House and Senate have each proposed their own plan to stop the hike. It's a good problem to have: in just a few short weeks this issue has grabbed the limelight, attracted bipartisan support, and a major piece of the Congressional agenda.

So what does it all mean, and why is it important?

Last week, Young Invincibles, along with Center for American Progress, Campus Progress and U.S. PIRG, released a report describing what will happen if the interest rates are allowed to double.

Currently, 7.4 million college students -- about one in every three undergraduates -- rely on Subsidized Stafford loans. They are need-based loans targeted at low-to-moderate-income students and families, providing them a chance at an education.

If interest rates double this summer, the change will cost the average college student about $1,000 more for each year of school. Tuition is already rising at about 8 percent per year at four-year public schools. Add an extra grand in interest and the effective cost of college will jump a whopping 20 percent next year for the typical student relying on these loans.

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Meanwhile, young people and their families have never fully recovered from the 2001 "Dot-Com bust," let alone the Great Recession. As the report notes, median weekly earnings for 25 to 34-year-olds have actually fallen 5 percent since 2001. Yet even while this generation has been hit hardest, college graduates fare much better than their non-college peers, and a degree is increasingly becoming more important to 1) having a shot at entering the middle class, and 2) increasing the economic strength of our country.

In short, this generation needs higher education more than ever, even as the cost grows increasingly out of reach.

Young people and students of all political viewpoints get it. In a recent poll included in the report, 92 percent of young (18 to 34) Democrats and 78 percent of young Republicans say that increasing financial aid and making loans more affordable for college would help make the economy stronger. The need to keep down college costs and curb rising loan debt is a no-brainer, and it sounds like Washington is finally paying attention. Perhaps elected officials are listening to the people they represent?

Certainly, there will be an important discussion of how to cover the $6 billion cost of extending the lower interest rate. To put that number in perspective, $6 billion is how much the U.S. spends in three weeks for the war in Afghanistan. From a youth perspective, the overall goal and guiding principle for the debate is simple: Give all Americans a fair shot at the middle class, at the American Dream. The House GOP proposal to take the $6 billion by eliminating basic health care prevention programs fails that simple test. It offers a false choice: your health or a more affordable education?

There are far better ways to fund the interest rate extension. For example, our tax system is full of expensive loopholes that only benefit a privileged minority, at the expense of middle- and working-class families. Closing those unfair loopholes would more than pay for the extension of student loan interest rates, and would place the burden in the right place -- not on the backs of middle-class families. In short, there is simply no reason why Congress should not be able to come together and find a bipartisan way to keep rates low, and if students and their families keep up the clamor, Washington will simply have to respond.

As we debate the best way forward, it's important to remember that we're in a generation-long crisis when it comes to the cost of college. Student debt is one big part of the problem. Let's fix this interest rate issue, and build momentum over the coming months to discuss broader student loan and college cost reform, so that students aren't locked out of an education that is increasingly becoming the only path to financial security in America.

Jennifer Mishory is the deputy directory of Young Invincibles, Nicholas Kelly is a fellow with the organization.

This post marks the launch of a five-part series that will take a broader look at the issue of student debt. Tune in for next week's post: "$1,000,000,000,000: How Did We Get Here?"

 

Follow Jennifer Mishory on Twitter: www.twitter.com/@JenMishory

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Part I of an ongoing series on student loans The student loan interest rate debate has gone viral, and a result, it's taken over Congress. This is great news, because if Congress does not act by Ju...
Part I of an ongoing series on student loans The student loan interest rate debate has gone viral, and a result, it's taken over Congress. This is great news, because if Congress does not act by Ju...
 
 
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02:11 AM on 05/09/2012
Hopefully the college students of today are smart enough to realize why this issue is coming to the forefront. It is, of course, due top the election.
Hopefully you all realize the scam: "I didn't break it, but if I did, I can fix it, BUT, you have to re-elect me."
Hopefully you all realize you are being threatened by the President of the United States of America.
"Vote for me, or I'll do everything I can to jack up your interest rates before I fFINALLY get kicked out of office."

DON'T fall for the oldest political trick in the book. The dems have been pulling it for years. Carter used similar tricks.

Realize this:
Obama got us unto this, and re-electing him WILL NOT SOLVE THE PROBLEM of a communist, racist president abusing his power to further the success of his oil company.
05:05 PM on 05/07/2012
Why is it that no one talks about the people that went to school 10 years ago? I have a 100K loan that is LOCKED in at 6.5% interest rate. No one is doing anything about those people are they? It's all of a sudden about the current students while we all sit here for 10 years going in and out of forbearance because we wan't afford the $500+ dollars a month loan payment.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Siebenstein
> there is no endless growth
10:40 AM on 05/04/2012
Public education needs to be free, Kindergarten to PhD !!
05:08 PM on 05/06/2012
Free? Nothing is free, somebody pays for it, so why do you open up your wallet and give a handout.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Siebenstein
> there is no endless growth
10:39 PM on 05/06/2012
Sprry, you are trained to believe what you are saying. I look for people who are open to discuss the issue.
02:36 PM on 05/01/2012
This is a very important topic, especially for those who attend for-profit schools. For-profit schools are overpriced and under-delivered institutions that often do nothing more than line the executive's pockets with govt. back student loan money. Take Full Sail University in Winter Park, Fl for example. I attended there in 2009 and quickly found the "sales pitch" to be nothing like the reality that I was paying $50,000 for.

I'm not alone, many students find themselves "sold" on a for-profit school because the "salesman" is trained on how to hit the customers (prospective student) "hot button". They want to target anything that will make the person sign on for their expensive program, whether it be for bettering their children's life or getting out of the bad neighborhood, etc. To raise the interest rate on top of this already over-priced tuition is simply absurd because many students find themselves with nothing more than a worthless piece of paper and saddled with 10's of thousands of dollars in student loan debt that they often can not repay. Not only do we need to leave the interest rate alone, we need to have oversight on the for-profit industry that is ballooning the student loan nightmare. Check out my website www.fullsailreviews.net for more info on Full Sail University along with news clips of others in the for-profit industry.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
EdwardMRoche
01:28 PM on 05/01/2012
The wholesale destruction and privatization of the student loan programs during the past administration is one of the greatest disasters in the history of the United States, and its effect will be felt for years and years. We bail out banks on short term issues, and starve students, who are the only long-term hope for the revival of the US economy. It is an incredible disaster.