Archive for January 19th, 2010
Recent Changes in the Funding of College Loans 4 comments
The last few years have been tough on almost everyone from a financial standpoint but, believe it or not, this is actually a good time to be entering college. The combination of the economic downturn and the change in Congress is spelling good news on some fronts for soon-to-be college students and their parents. Organizations that were once among the largest private lenders, such as Chase, Wachovia, and CLC, have gotten out of the student-loan game, but government grant and loan opportunities have been expanding to pick up the slack. And government loans offer significantly better terms than the private lenders did even in good times.
For example, the maximum amount potentially awarded by a Pell Grant—the most famous and widespread form of government need-based grant—has recently increased to $5,350, with an added option for receiving an additional $2,675 in the summer. And those maximums are slated to keep climbing through 2012.
Additionally, the interest rate on a Stafford Loan, the most common type of unsubsidized government loan, has recently dropped to 5.6%, and will continue to drop—to 4.5% in June, and then to a very low 3.4% at the same time in 2011 (before jumping back to the former rate of 6.8% in 2012). And while this next bit of information doesn’t help new college students, older friends and siblings who borrowed prior to July 2006 would do well to reconsolidate now, if they haven’t done so already, as a locked-in rate of just 2.5% is currently available (along with a rate of 3.38% for parents in the process of repaying PLUS loans). And while exploring post-graduation career options, students should bear in mind that borrowers entering nonprofit or civil-service (government) careers will have the remainder of their debt written off by the feds after ten years. And there are more jobs that count as “government” ones than you might realize (teaching in a public school, for example)!
A new policy known as Income-Based Repayment (IBR) is more welcome news. Borrowers who find themselves struggling with their payment plan will be able to cut a deal enabling them to pay 15% of their discretionary income (i.e., income in excess of 1.5 times the poverty level for their family size) per month instead of a flat minimum. What happens if you’re making less than 1.5 times the poverty level? You pay nothing, for as long as that remains the case. And no matter how much (or how little) you pay, the government forgives the remainder after 25 years. Of course, the longer you take to repay a loan, the more interest builds up, so a good educated guess about your future will save you money: if you think you’ll end up paying off your student loans in less than 25 years, do it fast; if not, do it slow. This now applies to any federal student loan, from any lender, no matter when you took it out!
It’s clear that the current environment has made the increased affordability of higher education a greater priority. New policies, or more changes to the current ones, are certainly possible, so keep your eyes and ears open—but the bottom line is that, now more than ever, pursuing loans from private lenders is definitely a last resort.
