NextStudent Home | Student Loan Blog

Word to the Wise on New Loan Forgiveness Programs: You May Not Qualify

Published 10 June 08 03:56 PM | Student Loan Girl 

College students looking to relieve their federal student loan debt “will be sorely disappointed” with the government’s new loan forgiveness programs that will begin in 2009, according to an article in U.S. News & World Report (“The Problem with Federal Loan Forgiveness Programs,” May 28, 2008).

Under the public-service loan forgiveness program, students must make payments on their student loans for 10 years before the loans can be forgiven, said Diane Auer Jones, assistant secretary for postsecondary education, at the College Savings Foundation conference last month. Since a majority of federal student loans have a 10-year term, there may be no loan balance left to be forgiven.

In addition, the Department of Education is concerned that "some students will see the program and take on more debt than they would have otherwise, not realizing it is unlikely that most of their loans will be forgiven," Jones commented.

The public-service loan forgiveness program grants $4,000 in “Teach grants” to students studying to be teachers in “high need” classrooms. But teachers who accept the grants and do not end up working in needy schools, will see those grants turn into loans that have to be repaid. Based on the outcome of similar government programs, up to 80 percent of grant recipients ended up having to repay their grant-turned-loan with interest, U.S. News reports.

Robert Shireman, director of the Project on Student Debt, suggests instead that students consolidate their loans under the federal government’s new Income-based Repayment option. The program allows low-pay service workers to make reasonable monthly payments based on their income level and to have the balance of the loan forgiven after 120 payments.



Share this post: email this | del.icio.us | reddit

Comment Notification

If you would like to receive an email when updates are made to this post, please register here

Subscribe to this post's comments using RSS

Comments

# VOPS said on June 11, 2008 5:11 AM:

The income based student loan repayment option is not that great either. At the end of the 25 year pay off, the balance is then taxed as income by the IRS, with what will be a huge tax bill due. If you cannot pay that, you end up paying interest and late fees to the IRS, so the nightmare continues, and never ends.

Personally I do not consider that an option either.

Leave a Comment

(required) 
(optional)
(required) 

Syndication

NextStudent RSS
Google Reader or Homepage
Add to My Yahoo!
Subscribe with Bloglines
Subscribe in NewsGator Online

Add to My AOL
Add to Technorati Favorites!

This Blog

Tags

Search

Go