Plan hopes to make student loans more forgiving

Thursday, October 27, 2011

Plan hopes to make student loans more forgiving

By:  Sandra Block, USA TODAY

The Obama administration's proposal to provide relief to student loan borrowers could reduce payments for some college graduates, but the plan won't do anything for borrowers with the most expensive types of student loans, analysts say.

The plan, which was unveiled Wednesday, contains two main elements:

•Expands a program that allows federal student loan borrowers to apply for a reduction in their loan payments based on their income.

Currently, borrowers who qualify for the income-based repayment program can have loan payments capped at 15% of their discretionary income. After 25 years of qualifying payments, the balance of the loan will be forgiven. Under the administration's proposal, payments would be capped at 10% of discretionary income and forgiven after 20 years.

However, this expanded relief would only apply to loans issued in 2012 or later, says Michael Ryan, vice president of American Student Assistance, a non-profit that helps borrowers manage their debt. Borrowers with loans issued before 2012 would be subject to the existing income-based repayment standards, he says.

Advocates for student borrowers hope the administration's plan will raise awareness about the income-based repayment program, which they say has been underused. An estimated 450,000 borrowers have signed up since the program was launched in 2009, says Lauren Asher, president of the Institute for College Access and Success.

•Borrowers who have both Federal Family Education Loans, which are federally guaranteed loans issued by private lenders, and Direct Loans, which are issued directly by the federal government, can lower their interest rate by a half-percentage point by consolidating all of their loans into the Direct Loan program.

This option is only available to borrowers who have both types of loans, Ryan says. Borrowers who have already consolidated their loans won't be eligible. The consolidation option would be available from January through June 2012.

The Obama plan doesn't provide any relief for borrowers who have private student loans, which are issued by private lenders and aren't backed by the federal government, Ryan says. Unlike federal student loans, private loans have variable interest rates that may shoot higher after the borrower graduates. They also lack many of the protections that come with federal loans. Borrowers who are having trouble repaying these loans have few options, other than seeking relief from the lender.

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