RedCherries05
Experienced
- Joined
- Oct 19, 2005
- Posts
- 66
Student Loan Interest


Last edited:
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.

Yep, it's completely different here, and we do get a raw deal, especially since our monkey of a president decided education wasn't important and helped interest rates rise exponentially in the past few years. My loans (from 2001) are at around 3%, yet the Bushman and his lackeys in Congress pushed the rate up to more than 8% recently, basically saying "the US doesn't care about higher education and having an educated workforce."cat_and_bear said:It also varies over the world.
Go to your bank and ask to speak to a financial advisor they should be happy to help you with the basics free of charge. (Here in Australia any way)
The student loans we have here in Australia are not worth paying back. They are only indexed by CPI. Your employer should be withholding some of your income for the minimum payments they will all be paid for you with your tax.
As it’s only indexed by CPI it never really 'grows' so there is no benefit paying it off sooner. In fact if you have the unfortunate luck of being struck down young the upside is that its canceled and your loved ones don’t owe a thing. (so basically don’t pay it, just put your money in to some other investment that can be left to your family on the off chance you get hit by a truck)
Im not very familiar with the way student loans work in the rest of the world but you Americans look like you have one hell of a raw deal.
~Bear
SweetErika said:Yep, it's completely different here, and we do get a raw deal, especially since our monkey of a president decided education wasn't important and helped interest rates rise exponentially in the past few years. My loans (from 2001) are at around 3%, yet the Bushman and his lackeys in Congress pushed the rate up to more than 8% recently, basically saying "the US doesn't care about higher education and having an educated workforce."![]()
I consolidated a couple of years ago (not in 2002; maybe '04, before rates started rising), and am at about 3%. The following is what I was referring to:bighornedsatyr said:While I hate Bush as much as the next guy, I don't think you can blame him for the increase in rates. The rates of Stafford loans (which are the type of most college loans) are set by adding a fixed amount to the 3-month T-Bill rate. In 2002, the economy was in recession, and the T-Bill rate was low, if you consolidated your college loans then, you would have received the very low rate of 3.5%. Now the economy is doing better, and the Fed has raised interest rates to keep a lid on inflation and the interest rate is roughly 3 points higher. Add back in the 0.6% discount you would have gotten for consolidating in 2002, and that explains nearly all the difference.
http://transcripts.cnn.com/TRANSCRIPTS/0205/28/ltm.11.html
http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/data/DTB3.txt
I don't know if I'd agree that the rates are high. I'd make the case the principal itself has gotten too high.
http://money.cnn.com/2005/12/22/pf/college/congress_loans/index.htm?postversion=2006020807
Students to face heavier debt burden
Report: Congress cuts $12.7 billion from federal student-loan programs.
February 8, 2006: 7:40 AM EST
NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) - Congress cut funding for federal student-loan program on Wednesday, raising the cost of attending college for many future students, according to a published report.
The Senate passed a deficit-reduction package that calls for $12.7 billion to be cut from federal student-loan programs over five years, the Wall Street Journal reported Thursday.
It is the largest single cut the federal government has made to student aid programs and is expected to increase the debt burden of students and their families as many borrowers of student loans will face higher interest payments, the newspaper said.
According to the Journal, Congress raised interest rates on Stafford loans to a fixed 6.8 percent. Right now, rates on Stafford loans, which are variable and reset each year, are as low as 4.7 percent, the paper said. Stafford loans are popular among students because they don't have to demonstrate need to qualify for one.
The new legislation also raises interest rates on Parent Loans for Undergraduate Students to a fixed 8.5 percent from a variable rate currently set at 6.1 percent, the Journal said. Also known as PLUS loans, these loans are granted to parents rather than students.
The move to fixed rates will cost students and their families thousands of dollars over the life of the loan, the report said, citing estimates from Mark Kantrowitz, a financial aid expert.
If a student consolidated a typical Stafford loan balance of $20,000 at the new rate compared with the current low rate, he would be paying over $2,000 more in interest over a standard 10-year life of the loan. With PLUS, parents would be paying nearly $3,000 more, the Journal said.
The cuts were part of a $40 billion deficit-reduction package the Senate passed that also affects Medicaid and pension insurance, the report said. Many of the changes would take effect July 1, 2006, the Journal reported.