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Rich Williams

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The New Student Battle Cry: Don't Double My Rate!

Posted: 04/25/2012 1:49 pm

During a speech Tuesday at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, President Obama led students in the chant "Don't Double My Rate!" Then, he flew to University of Colorado in Boulder to deliver the same message to Congress and was at the University of Iowa on Wednesday. Students on more than two dozen campuses in 18 states organized 'watch parties' to listen to the president's speech, including one at UNC Chapel Hill that brought together more than 100 students.

Meanwhile, presidential candidate Mitt Romney came out in support of preventing the impending federal Stafford student loan rate hike.

The media and the country are just waking up to the alarming fact that unless Congress acts by July 1, the interest rate on subsidized Stafford student loans will double from 3.4 percent to 6.8 percent. Congress must not let that happen.

Well over 7 million students could pay up to and additional $5,000 on their new federal loans, unless Congress acts before then to extend the low rate.

College is practically a necessity these days. Over 70 percent of Americans think that college is extremely important to success in life.

The president hammered the theme home: "Right now, the unemployment rate for Americans with a college degree or more is about half the national average." It's the deep debt that borrowers and their families must assume that has the public in an uproar.

There is good reason for the uproar. The number of college students graduating with significant student loan debt at over $40,000 has tripled in the last decade. Heavy student loan debt has also been shown to impedes workforce development and is slowing recovery in the housing market, in particular, as young people are putting off buying homes.

Until the economy grows strong again, Congress must help Americans obtain the higher education and training needed to stay competitive, by preventing the interest rate hike. Time is running out.

Some question whether the uproar is strong enough to overcome the deeply partisan environment in Washington, D.C. that has blocked movement on the issue in Congress.

The reality is that student aid issues have traditionally enjoyed strong support across the aisle. The College Cost Reduction and Access Act of 2007, the act that set the lower interest rate, was supported by 77 House Republicans, dozens of Senate Republicans and signed into law by President Bush.

Congress may have changed since 2007 but the rest of us still believe strongly in college access and affordability. Concern over high student debt, and its ability to erode the advantage of a college education, is deeply felt. For the sake of individual students and the larger economy, Congress should act quickly and heed the student calls to "Don't Double My Rate."

 

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During a speech Tuesday at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, President Obama led students in the chant "Don't Double My Rate!" Then, he flew to University of Colorado in Boulder to d...
During a speech Tuesday at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, President Obama led students in the chant "Don't Double My Rate!" Then, he flew to University of Colorado in Boulder to d...
 
 
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03:59 AM on 05/28/2012
Once again the entitilment generation wants taxpayers to pay thier way. I'm paying 5.5% and I've never once asked for others to subsidze my loan. My sister and brother-in-law paid 8% and they worked hard and paid off thier loans. We didn't go off and buybig screen TVs or new cars after graduation but paid out bills.
Why should a lot of taxpayers who didn't go to college be on the hook to subsidize the bills for those who did?
Also, students who take easy classes like art appreciation should not expect to get 6 figure jobs. It's not rocket science but then again.... maybe it is.
10:02 PM on 04/25/2012
College use to mean something now they let anybody in and the requirements only include the ability to take out a loan. Doubling the rate might be a good idea, this way the janitorial position at the local school won't require a bachelors degree.
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ChicanoBear
What Gender is a Corporation?
05:02 PM on 04/25/2012
if these republicans raise the rates it would be just another slap in the face of struggling young americans, while the millionaires keep their tax breaks. Lets hope there is still decent repubs. Who can relate to the commoners.
03:04 PM on 04/26/2012
I don't seem to see where the republicans ever opposing extending the lower rate, or are you just party bashing because it is popular?
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ChicanoBear
What Gender is a Corporation?
04:03 PM on 04/26/2012
why not just put up a bill that doesnt take away from womens healthcare? They may not oppose it, but they seem reluctant. If republicans actually did something that helped the middle class without trying to barter with program slashing i wouldnt have to bash them. Easy to bash on people who obviously work for the rich and arent afraid to show it, i give them respect for that.
04:04 AM on 05/28/2012
I'm paying 5.5% and you don't see me asking the tax payer to subsidize my school loan. These individuals need to take responsibility, grow up and act like adults.
Most of those kids will graduate college and buy a new car, TV, fancy purses..... Instead of buying starbucks everyday maybe they can brew some coffee at home and pay thier school bills. It's about prioritization.
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ChicanoBear
What Gender is a Corporation?
08:31 PM on 05/28/2012
i guess the recession isn't real, and funding wars is more important. Starting wars then cutting taxes is the republican way. Instead of investing in American youth, republicans want to invest in making their donors richer. 
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Linda Jernigan
Mandela says YOU can be that great generation!
03:13 PM on 04/25/2012
It appears overall that the publicans are being counterproductive to the idea of college kids getting a decent education at a fair price (from tuition to student loan debts). They seem to be an impediment to all things good...totally against We the People of the United States.