Program to Offer NY Students Low-Cost College Loans
Despite New York’s $15 billion budget deficit, Gov. David Paterson announced he is creating a student loan program that would allow New York college students to borrow $350 million in low-cost private student loans directly from the state, reports The New York Times (“Governor to Unveil a Low-Cost Student Loan Program,” Dec. 15, 2008).
State officials say the new student loan program, meant to help the state “retain the best and the brightest young minds,” will offer lower rates than most private student loans — potentially as low as 8 percent. Interest rates will be adjusted annually based on market conditions.
Paterson plans to allocate $50 million in state funds to jumpstart the program and $10 million each year thereafter — a key recommendation of the Commission on Higher Education. The commission studied New York’s higher education system for more than a year and found that the state’s 1 million college and graduate students had taken out $2 billion in private loans, and that those students often paid as much as 12 percent on their loans, double the interest that students paid in states with low-cost student loan programs.
Paterson hopes the loan program will help ease the financial challenges that face students now that lenders have tightened their credit criteria and as public and private colleges consider tuition increases to cope with state budget cuts. To help balance the state budget, Paterson has proposed increasing tuition at the City University of New York and the State University of New York.
“One of the big problems in the student loan program is that it is drying up,” said Jeffrey Gordon, a spokesman for the budget division of the governor’s office. “People who were able to get loans last year can’t get them this year.”
Under the loan initiative, students at two-year colleges would be eligible to take out a maximum of $20,000 in loans, while undergraduates at four-year institutions could borrow up to $50,000. New York students pursuing both an undergraduate and graduate degree would be capped at borrowing a combined total of $70,000 in private student loans.
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