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    Federal Student Loans Rate Set to Double

    Attention college students: The interest rate on federal student loans is scheduled to double this summer unless Congress acts soon.

    Loans taken out for the current school year carried an interest rate of 3.4%, thanks to a 2007 law that phased in rate reductions for subsidized Stafford loans to undergraduate students. But the law did not specify the rate after this year. So unless something is done, rates on new loans will revert back to 6.8% -- where they were in 2007.

    President Obama urged lawmakers in his State of the Union address Tuesday to stop this rate hike from going into effect. He also asked Congress to extend the enhanced Hope Scholarship program, which increased the maximum tax credit to $2,500. And he wants to double the number of federal work-study jobs.

    But it remains to be seen whether this deficit-conscious Congress will act, especially since extending the 3.4% rate would cost $5.6 billion a year, according to Mark Kantrowitz, publisher of FinAid.org. All told, Obama's proposals would total at least $10 billion a year.

    While the president has focused on expanding access to college for low- and middle-income children, lawmakers have taken several steps to whittle away at student aid.

    Congress has eliminated subsidized loans for graduate students, as well as most discounts. They also cut $8 billion out of the Pell Grant program for low-income students and reduced the income threshold for eligibility for a full Pell Grant.

    5 colleges slashing tuition

    "[Since] Congress just passed legislation cutting student financial aid funding, it's unlikely they'll pass legislation increasing student aid funding," Kantrowitz said.

    Raising student loan rates will prove costly, said Lauren Asher, president of the Project on Student Debt. Someone who graduates with $23,000 in debt will pay an additional $4,600 in interest over 10 years.

    Two-thirds of college seniors graduating in 2010 had student loan debt, and the average balance was more than $25,000, the project found.

    "In this tough economy, people are concerned about the cost of college and the burden of debt to follow," Asher said.



    More From CNNMoney.com

     
    • BillnJanet  •  Washington, District of Columbia  •  7 days ago
      The cost of tuition rose as student loans became more available, easy money created an easy way to hike tuition but unfortunately the student has taken on his back an untenable load. It is time to get rid of student loans and force the colleges to reduce their services and tuition. Only then can America get back to the forefront of education and at the same time help reduce the debt load on her people. Cut the costs!
    • JackB  •  8 days ago
      Easy credit is why tuition is surging.
    • JackB  •  8 days ago
      Students are making themselves bank slaves by taking on lifetime loans.
    • Larry Herndon  •  Lemont, Illinois  •  10 days ago
      A billion here, a trillion there, a quadrillion...POP! (Game Over.)
    • John  •  27 days ago
      The problem is the cost of college. It has been risen about 5x faster than inflation since 1986. Federal loans, in addition to leaving students with crippling debts, have only made these increases easier.
    • notmyfault  •  27 days ago
      ...0 ssssooooooooo GLAD those are paid off! Now, if I could just find those career openings "they" told me would be there...HA...
    • Trish  •  27 days ago
      Yeah..let's raise the rates when so many people are already in default..our education system is as corrupt as our healthcare system
    • AnnieRoo  •  27 days ago
      Typical, give BILLIONS to other countries and screw over Americans.
    • Shemp Howard  •  27 days ago
      bail out all student loans just like the banks were bailed out.
    • Shadow  •  Hood River, Oregon  •  28 days ago
      Great... just great....
    • tony  •  27 days ago
      6.8%-3.4%=3.4% difference. These banks that make student loans are getting 3.4% subsidized from the federal government. Savers who saved their whole lives are getting forked over with CDs paying 1%. Whos in bed with the banks? Our federal government.
    • cangelcares  •  Irving, Texas  •  27 days ago
      Let's just put it out there, CONGRESS DON'T CARE!!! If you are an American that cannot afford to send you children to college, then thats your problem! They are elitist and do not want the "average" American child to have the same priverlidges their children have! LETS START TERM LIMITS! These people have been in office too long! They are not forward thinkers, & want to keep things the way they were! Get out & let some fresh new ideas come to congress! Not what your grand-dad would have done! There should be 4/year terms just like the president! Tired of financing their "high price" living status and that of their children while me & mines pay all the taxes, and can't afford to better ourselves! SHAME ON YOU CONGRESS! They need to read the Consttution of the United States!!! lets LIVE by it!
    • Richard  •  New York, New York  •  28 days ago
      I thought when the gov took over student loans it was to keep it affordable and less burdensome to students. I guess not your gov. at work. Another joke.
    • XC  •  28 days ago
      In other news, big corporations get 0% interest rates on their "loans."
    • Pinhead  •  27 days ago
      remember kids, big government is bad
    • Karen V  •  28 days ago
      When the Government has the monopoly.....watch out.
    • Sad  •  Sunnyvale, California  •  27 days ago
      When I was in college, my subsidized loans were 9%. Those were the 80s!
    • James  •  13 days ago
      The real problem are the colleg professors and what they are getting paid. Cut their pay and tuition drops. Cut free funding and universities have to cut costs. That's the way to correct this. Everything subsidized by the government inflates the cost to irrational levels.
    • Paul  •  Milwaukee, Wisconsin  •  27 days ago
      It's like paying a penalty to get educated. Raise the rate and there will be more defaults. FTW
    • PsychoS  •  St Louis, Missouri  •  27 days ago
      You low life government. Any way to make an extra buck. Oh! That's gonna really help people who are hurting right now. Kick em while they are down.

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