President
Obama on Tuesday outlined plans to help ease the debt burden of students.
“In a
global economy, putting a college education within reach for every American has
never been more important, but it’s also never been more expensive,” Pres.
Obama said. “That’s why today we’re taking steps to help nearly 1.6 million
Americans lower their monthly student loan payments.”
The student
loan orders are the latest in a campaign Obama aides call “We Can’t Wait,”
stressing executive action as the president’s $447 billion jobs bill is held up
in Congress.
Education
Secretary Arne Duncan said, “College graduates are entering one of the toughest
job markets in recent memory, and we have a way to help them save money by
consolidating their debt and capping their loan payments. And we can do it at
no cost to the taxpayer.”
The White
House describes the changes:
The Administration is moving forward with a
new “Pay As You Earn” proposal that will reduce monthly payments for more than
one and a half million current college students and borrowers. Starting in
2014, borrowers will be able to reduce their monthly student loan payments to
10 percent of their discretionary income. But President Obama realizes that
many students need relief sooner than that. The new “Pay As You Earn” proposal
will allow about 1.6 million students the ability to cap their loan payments at
10 percent starting next year, and the plan will forgive the balance of their
debt after 20 years of payments. Additionally, starting this January an
estimated 6 million students and recent college graduates will be able to
consolidate their loans and reduce their interest rates. …
Current law allows borrowers to limit their
loan payments to 15 percent of their discretionary income and forgives all
remaining debt after 25 years. However, few students know about this option.
Students can find out if they are currently eligible for IBR at
www.studentaid.ed.gov/ibr. Last year, the President proposed, and Congress
enacted, a plan to further ease student loan debt payment by lowering the IBR
loan payment to 10 percent of income, and the forgiveness timeline to 20 years.
This change is set to go into effect for all new borrowers after 2014—mostly
impacting future college students.
Today, the Administration is proposing to
offer even more immediate relief to many current college students by giving
them the chance to limit loan payments to 10 percent of their discretionary
income starting in 2012. In addition, the debt would be forgiven after 20 years
instead of 25, as current law allows. For many who struggle to manage their
student loan debt – including teachers, nurses, public defenders and others in
lower-paying jobs – these proposed changes could reduce their payments by
hundreds of dollars each month. Overall, this proposal would provide an
estimated 1.6 million borrowers with more manageable monthly payments.
The Administration is also planning to
offer student borrowers the chance to better manage their debt by consolidating
their federal student loans. Today, approximately 5.8 million borrowers have
both a Direct Loan (DL) and a Federal Family Education Loan (FFEL) that require
separate payments, which makes them more likely to default. To address the
needs of these borrowers, the Administration will allow borrowers the
convenience of a single payment to a single lender for both loans. Borrowers
who take advantage of this consolidation option, which begins in January, would
also receive up to a 0.5 percent reduction in their interest rate on some of
their loans, which means lower monthly payments that would save hundreds of
dollars in interest. Eligible borrowers will be contacted by their federal loan
servicer early next year with information on how to consolidate.
These
changes carry no additional cost to taxpayers.
No comments:
Post a Comment