close this window
The State of Student Loans
Obama’s State of the Union speech addressed the problem of student loan debt.
In his State of the Union speech last night, President Obama took on the topic of steep student loans, touching on an issue Miller-McCune looked at earlier this week. He urged the Senate to pass a bill to “revitalize our community colleges,” and he added that this bill will end taxpayer subsidies for student loans (for detailed commentary on this issue, see Tim Dickenson’s Rolling Stone article) and re-channel this money into Pell grants. The Pell Grant program gives need-based grants to undergraduates and some grad school students, based on their estimated family contribution, cost of attendance and enrollment status.
Perhaps most notably, he said that college graduates will have their loan payments capped at 10 percent of their income — a signal change from the plan we wrote about, which can actually increase the amount of interest repaid on loans for borrowers who don’t pursue careers in public service. And all student loan debt will be forgiven after 20 years — 10 for grads who work in public service (which is nothing new).
If this plan is implemented universally, it would address the current enrollment problems of the Income-Based Repayment plan. Plus, the plan would make it affordable for borrowers to pay back their loans in a reasonable time frame, without fear that their manageable monthly payments will lead to a lifetime of debt.
Sign up for our free e-newsletter.
Are you on Facebook? Become our fan.
Follow us on Twitter.
word on the street
- Shannon Gallegos
- Anonymous
more in this section
House Puts Transportation in Partisan Crossfire
Overseas Troops Finally Get Fair Shot at Voting
Pirate Party Docks at Berlin’s Parliament
Conservatives’ Politics of Fear a Biological Response
Supreme Court Calls For New Try on Texas Districts
Who Owns Government-Funded Research Papers?
Republicans Like Candidates Who Look Republican
Obama’s Military Strategy Follows Our Predictions
OWS, Egypt Expose Limits of Town Square Test
SOPA Debate Highlights Congress’s Ignorance
also by this author
Lessons From China and India’s Newspaper BoomHow the print media in China and India are succeeding — and what America’s ailing journalism industry might learn from them.
Making Seed Aid BlossomThe quake in Haiti and floods in Pakistan highlight that the multimillion-dollar emergency seed aid industry is in need of a makeover.
When Migrant Workers Return HomeThousands of Latin-American migrants come to work in the United States every year, legally and illegally. But does their time in the U.S. help or hurt them when they return to their home countries?
Public Schools: An Untapped Recreational ResourceResearchers suggest limiting liability issues to make playgrounds and other recreation areas on school grounds accessible as a cost-effective way to promote public health.
Recreating the Creative Industry in New OrleansIn the wake of Hurricane Katrina, New Orleans has been rebounding slowly. Five years after the disaster, researchers suggest that the city promote its entertainment industry as a development strategy.

Receive 1 year (6 issues) of our print magazine for just $14.95. Miller-McCune features polished, in-depth reports on research and solutions across the policy spectrum — from health care, education and energy to international affairs, poverty and the global economy. It's a must read for well-informed and solutions-driven individuals.

follow us on:
from the source

The wage gap between the sexes in America has been closing much faster than anyone realized, but that’s tempered by learning it’s been much wider than measurements had shown.

An effort to identify five performing orcas as slaves failed in part, argues one scholar, because there’s no legal precedent establishing them as persons.

New research finds listeners judge symphonic music differently when they’re told the conductor is a woman.

New research suggests less-creative people do more innovative thinking when they are told individualism is the norm, and instructed to conform.

A lot of people say they watch the Super Bowl mostly for the ads. But it turns out a good game surrounding those ads makes them seem better.







