The U.S. Senate and House have passed a student loan bill President
Obama will almost certainly sign. Bipartisanship lives! But don’t get
too excited. Heck, don’t get excited at all: The bill will only deliver
minor tweaks to a system that needs elimination, not a screw or two
turned a little harder.
The bill, which ties interest rates on federal student loans to 10-year Treasury notes, certainly makes more sense than having Congress arbitrarily set a rate. Student loan rates moving with overall interest rates — not stuck well above or below them — makes sense if you are trying to balance the government’s need for revenue with a desire to furnish loans more cheaply than students would otherwise be able to get them. For supporters of such programs, getting this should have been simple, which is why — despite significant fighting — it ultimately got done.
http://www.cato.org/publications/commentary/now-lets-try-real-student-aid-reform
The bill, which ties interest rates on federal student loans to 10-year Treasury notes, certainly makes more sense than having Congress arbitrarily set a rate. Student loan rates moving with overall interest rates — not stuck well above or below them — makes sense if you are trying to balance the government’s need for revenue with a desire to furnish loans more cheaply than students would otherwise be able to get them. For supporters of such programs, getting this should have been simple, which is why — despite significant fighting — it ultimately got done.
http://www.cato.org/publications/commentary/now-lets-try-real-student-aid-reform
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