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Compromise on Student Loan Interest Rates May Result in Higher Costs

Compromise on Student Loan Interest Rates May Result in Higher Costs
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The two-party structure and compromise within the duopoly hasn't always led to the best solutions. Much like sequestration, Congress let subsidized student loan interest rates pass its deadline, resulting in undesired results stemming from inaction. However, the federal government is now pushing for a compromise on student loan interest rates. Credit: whitehouse.gov (click to enlarge)

A Bipartisan Deal on Student Loan Interest Rate Is Better Than Nothing

The compromise -- Bipartisan Student Loan Certainty Act -- originated from the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions by notable lawmakers such as Sen. Tom Harkin (D-IA), Sen. Richard Burr (R-NC), and Sen. Angus King (I-ME).

The deal initially brings the 6.8 percent interest rate on subsidized undergraduate loans down to 3.86 percent. This is still a slight increase from the original 3.4 percent rate before July 1st. Graduate students would have their subsidized loans at a 5.4 percent rate. PLUS loans are reduced from 7.9 percent to 6.4 percent.

Notable criticisms express dissatisfaction because the compromise does not go far enough in reducing loan rates. Banks experience lower rates of borrowing, a concern that Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) emphasizes.

Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT) is skeptical of the bipartisan compromise on student loan interest rates, saying the pre-July 1 rates should have been extended in order to reach a better solution.

Details from the Congressional Budget Office outline exactly how the rates are constructed from the bipartisan bill:

based on the 10-year Treasury rate

No deal is perfect, government does not function without compromise. However, the bipartisan bill leaves the possibility of students paying loans at a higher rate than the current increase.

Check out previous coverage of student loans and student debt:

Increased Student Loan Rates Will Have Lasting Impact on Economy
$28 Billion Will Be Subject to Doubled Student Loan Interest Rate
7 Facts About Student Loan Debt You Did Not Know
Student Loans in California Worth the Burden and Make Economic Sense

Michael Higham

UC San Diego, Class of 2012, B.A. in Political Science. Education Journalist occasionally diving into energy policy, with the aspiration of becoming the coolest high school teacher or college professor your kids ever had.</p&gt

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