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Posts Tagged ‘STUDENT loans’

Student loans and repayment rates: the role of for-profit colleges






This paper examines the institutional determinants of federal loan status for a recent cohort of college students. We first set out how institutions influence loan accumulations and repayment rates, with particular focus on for-profit colleges. We then test a set of hypotheses about loan status and repayment using national data on loans, defaults, and repayments merged with college-level data. For all measures of loan status there are significant raw gaps between for-profit colleges and public and not-for-profit colleges. After controlling for student characteristics, measures of college quality, and college practices, large gaps in loan balance per student remain: students in for-profit colleges, especially the 2-year colleges, borrow approximately four times as much as they would have at a 2-year public college. For a student attending the ‘average’ college, their repayment rate is predicted to be 5 [9] percentage points lower if that college is for-profit compared to public [non-profit]. Repayment rates are also lower for colleges with higher proportions of minority students and with lower graduation rates; contrary to some claims, single-program institutions appear to have higher repayment rates. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]


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Deficit-Cutting Proposal Revives Debate Over Student-Loan Subsidy

The article examines a proposal by U.S. President Barack Obama’s committee on federal budget deficit reduction aimed at eliminating federal subsidies on federal student loans. It provides statistics regarding the amount of money the U.S. government pays towards interest costs on the federal Stafford and Perkins types of loans while students are enrolled in school. It explores the initial development of the federal student loan subsidy program in regards to dropout prevention, discusses planned increases to student loan interest rates in 2012, and provides comments from several individuals including former senator Alan K. Simpson, former college president Erskine B. Bowles, and education policy analyst Sandy Baum.

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Best deals on student LOANS

The article offers tips on getting the best deals on college student loans in the U.S. Robert Shireman, executive director of the Project on Student Debt advises students and their parents to go with federal loans first because they are easy to apply for and carry a fixed interest rate. Gary Carpenter, a certified college planner says that after the Perkins, the Stafford is the loan that students and parents can consider. They can also apply for Parent Loan for Undergraduate Students. INSET: Ways to borrow LESS.

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A Design-It-Yourself Student-Loan Program

The article presents the views of several experts on how to build a design-it-yourself student-loan program in the U.S. Philip R. Day Jr., president and chief executive of the National Association of Student Financial Aid Administrators, says the federal Pell Grant maximum should be raised to at least a $10,000 entitlement and awarded on a sliding scale based on need. Significantly increasing the Pell Grant would combat overreliance on loans for the most disadvantaged students. Brian K. Fitzgerald, executive director, Business-Higher Education Forum, says the federal government should play a leading role in bridging those sources of aid, creating certainty years in advance of college enrollment, and ensuring that the aid will be adequate to pay for college.

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Pay Attention to Mail from Your Student Loan Servicer

The article provides a reminder for student loan borrowers to pay attention to the e-mail and regular mail correspondence coming from the student loan servicer in terms of changes in the actual servicer, the servicer address and the due dates.

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Navigating STUDENT LOAN DEBT

The article discusses the challenges facing law students in the U.S. due to the rising tuition costs and the staggering amount of their student loan debts. According to Justin Draeger, president of the National Association of Student Financial Aid Administrators, law students have no access to federal grants which made them face disproportionate amount of student load debt. Ways on how to manage money in order to avoid disproportionate amount of debts are discussed. Through education and careful planning, law students can lessen the burden of loan.

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Help for Your Student Loan Payments

This article reports that the U.S. government will allow some graduate students to pay a portion of their income to their student loans rather than a fixed monthly amount beginning in the autumn of 2009. Students with low incomes will be able to pay fifteen percent or less to their student loans, and those who work in public service may have a portion of their loans forgiven. Different types of federal education loans are discussed, including Perkins loans, Stafford loans, and Grad PLUS loans.

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Sallie Mae Fights for Student-Loan Role in a Campaign That’s All About Jobs

The article discusses an effort by the Sallie Mae corporation to mobilize political support among its employees in its headquarters in Fishers, Indiana, against the effort of the administration of U.S. President Barack Obama to eliminate bank-based student lending. The effort comes after unsuccessful lobbying of Congress and the passage by the House of Representatives of the bill moving all federal loans to the Education Department’s direct loan program. The position of the company and its workers is that jobs will be lost if the law is passed. Christina Romer, chair of the Council of Economic Advisors, says there would be little net job loss and that new jobs would be created. Indiana University-Purdue University switched to direct loans only in 2008 to save students money.

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Obama’s Costly Student Loan Takeover

Gall it Chapter Three (after the $767 billion "stimulus" and the healthcare "reform" scheme) in Barack Obama's strategy to create an ever-expanding class of Americans dependent upon the government. The subject of this latest chapter is the government takeover of the student loan program. Obama and his statist allies in Congress attached this bill to the ... Read More

 

More Trouble for Student Loans

The article discusses student loans and providers. Following the troubles befalling subprime mortgages and corporate markets, National Education has ceased issuing federally subsidized student loans. Also, Finansure, which made over $600 million in educational loans for 2006, isn’t going to give out anymore loans. However, the U.S. government continues to cap interest rates for Stafford, Perkins, and PLUS loans.

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