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Funds for student consolidation loans may be cut
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"The fact is that the terms of the specific proposals of the president's budget say he would like to save money on loans," says Sandy Baum, senior policy analyst for the College Board and professor of economics at Skidmore College. "We don't know specifically what those changes would be. There is a reasonable chance, based on both the president's budget and conversations going on in Congress and proposals on the table, that opportunities for loan consolidation and locking in fixed interest rates will be more limited in the future."

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An educational reauthorization bill in some form is "a priority," says Alexa Marrero, spokewoman for the Committee on Education and the Workforce, which is working on the congressional bill. If Congress passes a version this year as expected, it would likely go into effect in July of 2006, she says.

Absent affordable loan solutions, students and parents would have to turn to private lenders for more expensive loans, Johnson says.

Consumers who have already consolidated their loans will be grandfathered in.

Likewise, there is no talk of changing the 8.25 percent interest rate cap on federally backed student loans, Marrero says.

And that's an important issue, says Morrow. "You have to protect the cap," he says.

Worried about consolidation loans?

Call your representatives, says Johnson. "This is not a fait accompli," he says. "This is not cast in stone. It is our president's vision of what he wants to see."

The real problem
No matter what happens between the White House and Capitol Hill, the interest rate on consolidation loans went up July 1 (the interest rate adjusts annually every July 1st).

"Your approach shouldn't change with the law," says Mark Oleson, assistant professor and director of the Financial Counseling Clinic at Iowa State University, which offers a useful Web site. "Your approach should be the same. Rates are going up, and you want to consolidate regardless."

Just how much rates will change is trickier to predict. The interest rate is based on the 91-day rate on U.S. Treasury bills, and that rate has been climbing.

The increase in July went from last year's 3.37 percent to 5.3 percent for student loans in repayment.

Regardless, most financial aid analysts are recommending the same thing: Consolidate if you can.

"I would consolidate," says Baum. "Rates are not going down."

Best advice: Shop around and find the best deal. Since rates will be the same, look at who is offering the best discounts for such things as electronic payments and several years of on-time payments, says Oleson.

Find out the sources for all your financial aid money. Then shop around and see who is willing to give you the best deal on a consolidation loan. Don't forget your state loan guarantee agency.

And beware of those unusual situations when consolidating isn't the best move. For instance, if you have loans that will be forgiven or paid by your soon-to-be employer (usually for such jobs as teaching, law enforcement or health care work in needy areas), you may lose that option if you consolidate.

Dana Dratch is a freelance writer based in Atlanta.

 

Bankrate.com's corrections policy -- Posted: July 14, 2005
 
 
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