House cuts student loan interest in half

SuzannePjamSuzannePjam Posts: 411
edited January 2007 in A Moving Train
Wow, a bill to help the people, and not just big corporations. BushCo must be having heart palpatations. :eek:

House cuts student loan interest in half
$6B cost to be offset by reducing the yield, cutting guaranteed return

MSNBC staff and news service reports

WASHINGTON - The new Democratic-led U.S. House kept another campaign promise Wednesday and voted to help financially strapped students cover the soaring cost of college.
The House set aside objections from President Bush's administration as well as concerns by lenders and passed a bill to cut in half the interest rate on need-based federal student loans over five years to 3.4 percent.
"This legislation will be a vital first step toward helping lower college costs for millions of low- and middle-income students," said California Democratic Rep. George Miller. He is a chief sponsor of the measure that now goes to the closely divided Democratic-led Senate for an anticipated battle.

The change would help an estimated 5.5 million students who get need-based federal loans.
The government pays the interest that accrues on those loans while students are in college. Students pick up the payments after they leave school.
The rates would drop from 6.8 percent to 3.4 percent in stages over a five-year period under the House proposal. That would cost nearly $6 billion, according to the Congressional Budget Office.
Offsetting costs
To avoid increasing the deficit, the bill's cost would be offset by reducing the yield on college loans the government guarantees to lenders and cutting the guaranteed return banks get when students default. Banks also would have to pay more in fees.
Though the House has approved the bill, its future is uncertain beyond that. The Bush administration and some top Republican lawmakers oppose it. Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass., head of the Senate's education committee, plans to pursue broader education legislation that addresses the proposed interest rate cut.
Democrats, who took over Congress this year, are trying to make good on a campaign pledge. However, the plan has been scaled back.
During last year's campaign season, Democrats did not spell out that the cut they were talking about passing in the first 100 hours of the new Congress would only affect need-based loans. They also pledged to lower interest rates for parents who take out college loans for their children, and said they wanted to increase the maximum Pell grant award from $4,050 to $5,100. Pell grants go only to the neediest students and do not have to be paid back.
California Democratic Rep. George Miller, chairman of the House committee on education, said lawmakers plan to address those issues later.
Pros and cons
California Rep. Howard "Buck" McKeon, the highest-ranking Republican on the education committee, criticized Democrats for considering the legislation without hearings. He also said he worried the cuts could lessen the services and benefits students receive.
McKeon noted Congress cut $12 billion from the student loan program last year as part of a budget bill.
"If we make it so unattractive to be in the student loan business, they'll go into the car business," McKeon said of lenders.
Luke Swarthout, who lobbies on higher education issues for the U.S. Public Interest Research Group, said the industry is highly profitable and can sustain this round of cuts.
"This is one of the most heavily subsidized and lucrative industries," he said. "These lenders receive guaranteed profits with virtually no risk."
The House bill is H.R. 5.
"Where there is sacrifice there is someone collecting the sacrificial offerings."-- Ayn Rand

"Some of my friends sit around every evening and they worry about the times ahead,
But everybody else is overwhelmed by indifference and the promise of an early bed..."-- Elvis Costello
Post edited by Unknown User on

Comments

  • Yeah fuck Bush!
    "Sarcasm: intellect on the offensive"

    "What I lack in decorum, I make up for with an absence of tact."

    Camden 5-28-06
    Washington, D.C. 6-22-08
  • As a college student I like this.

    As a future high-income earner, I don't like this.
    All I know is that to see, and not to speak, would be the great betrayal.
    -Enoch Powell
  • spongersponger Posts: 3,159
    I already locked mine at 4% before the ridiculous increase last year, which, as I understand it, was to help pay back the costs associated with hurricane katrina.
  • 1970RR1970RR Posts: 281
    Just remember to avoid any drug convictions as they will make you ineligible for any government backed student loans. Of course, feel free to murder, rob and rape since those convictions have no effect on eligibility.
  • macgyver06macgyver06 Posts: 2,500
    As a college student I like this.

    As a future high-income earner, I don't like this.

    just remember..no matter how good you have it in the future.. keep it to yourself, and speak badly of those who have not reached your high level of income...


    lol.. can i take a guess where you could be from?

    :)
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