레이블이 CFPB Financial Aid Shopping Sheet인 게시물을 표시합니다. 모든 게시물 표시
레이블이 CFPB Financial Aid Shopping Sheet인 게시물을 표시합니다. 모든 게시물 표시

2013년 11월 29일 금요일

About 'cfpb student loan'|Want to be a slave Take out a student loan







About 'cfpb student loan'|Want to be a slave Take out a student loan








COMMENTARY               |               As               if               taking               a               cue               from               Rick               Santorum,               the               Congressional               Republicans               have               decided               to               make               it               much               more               expensive               for               American               families               to               turn               their               children               into               snobs.

The               interest               families               will               pay               for               exposing               students               to               "some               liberal               college               professor               trying               to               indoctrinate               them"               will               double               if               House               Republicans               have               their               way.

With               the               2007               passage               of               the               College               Cost               Reduction               and               Access               Act               the               interest               rates               for               subsidized               Stafford               Loans,               the               primary               federal               loan               program               for               middle               class               families,               Congress               gradually               stepped               interest               rates               down               to               3.4               percent               for               the               2011-12               academic               year.

According               to               the               U.S.

Department               of               Education,               approximately               10,000,000               students               participated               in               the               program               this               year,               borrowing               up               to               $5,500               at               the               subsidized               rate.

Unless               Congress               extends               the               subsidy               program               these               loans               will               jump               to               an               interest               rate               of               6.8               percent               for               the               2012-13               school               year.
               If               Congress               does               nothing,               the               typical               Stafford               borrower               would               see               a               $2,800               increase               in               interest               over               a               10-year               loan.

Students               who               borrow               the               maximum               $23,000               through               the               program               will               see               their               interest               cost               rise               by               $5,000               over               10               years               and               $11,000               over               20               years.
               The               Consumer               Financial               Protection               Bureau               has               recently               noted               that               total               student               loan               debt               has               surpassed               total               credit               card               debt               and               currently               tops               the               trillion               dollar               mark.

Proposed               cuts               in               Pell               grants,               adopted               in               the               recently               passed               Ryan               budget               plan,               will               serve               to               make               students               even               more               dependent               on               loans               for               the               financing               of               education.

The               primary               concern               on               the               part               of               the               House               GOP               is               really               how               fast               the               loans               will               be               repaid               and               how               soon               that               money               could               be               used               toward               deficit               reduction               plans.

Some               have               speculated               that               pushing               the               default               rate               up               would               actually               allow               for               quicker               deficit               reduction               since               the               government               would               be               repaid               quicker               through               the               seizure               of               assets               rather               than               through               a               typical               10               year               payment               plan.

Due               to               Republican               bankruptcy               reform               passed               in               2005,               student               loans               are               no               longer               eligible               to               be               included               in               bankruptcy.

The               government               can               now               garnish               wages               and               place               liens               on               property               to               collect               these               loans.
               In               addition,               Republicans               are               arguing               that               because               of               Pell               Grants               and               the               Stafford               program               universities               have               no               incentive               to               control               costs.

It               would               seem               that               the               intention               of               the               congressional               GOP               is               to               reduce               the               demand               for               higher               education               by               making               it               more               expensive               for               the               middle               class               and               by               discouraging               those               from               low               income               families               from               even               applying.

What               effect               lowering               demand               for               higher               education               in               this               way               would               have               on               tuition               has               not               been               quantified.
               Rep.

Virginia               Foxx               (R-N.C.),               chair               of               the               Higher               Education               Subcommittee,               has               identified               over               regulation               as               a               culprit               in               the               30-year               trend               of               tuitions               rising               at               at               least               twice               the               rate               of               inflation.

She               has               recently               introduced               H.R.

2117,               the               Protecting               Academic               Freedom               in               Higher               Education               Act,               in               order               to               reduce               federal               regulation               on               universities.

The               bill               would               repeal               the               Department               of               Educations               definition               of               a               credit               hour               and               grant               states               more               flexibility               in               defining               what               constitutes               a               college               or               university.

Since               the               DOE               regulations               were               introduced               in               2010               it               is               not               clear               how               much               these               regulations               are               adding               to               tuition               bills.

The               potential               impact               of               removing               these               regulations               is               unlikely               to               reduce               the               rise               in               tuition               anywhere               near               as               much               as               depressing               demand               would.
               It               is               clear               that               the               GOP               plan               for               simultaneously               reducing               the               deficit               and               lowering               the               cost               of               college               tuition               is               to               make               it               much               more               expensive               for               the               middle               class               and               almost               impossible               for               the               poorest               citizens               to               get               a               college               education.

The               additional               benefit               would               be               that,               as               Republicans               see               it,               in               the               words               of               Rick               Santorum,               it               would               deny               President               Obama               the               chance               to               "remake               you               in               his               image."






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