Student Loan Programs: Lower Interest Rates and Higher Loan Volume Have Increased Federal Consolidation Loan Costs.: An article from: General Accounting Office Reports & Testimony

 Student Loan Programs: Lower Interest Rates and Higher Loan Volume Have Increased Federal Consolidation Loan Costs.: An article from: General Accounting Office Reports & Testimony

This digital document is an article from General Accounting Office Reports & Testimony, published by Stonehenge International on May 1, 2004. The length of the article is 705 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.

Citation Details
Title: Student Loan Programs: Lower Interest Rates and Higher Loan Volume Have Increased Federal Consolidation Loan Costs.
Publication: General Accounting Office Reports & Testimony (Newsletter)
Date: May 1, 2004
Publisher: Stonehenge International
Volume: 2004 Issue: 5 Page: NA

Distributed by Thomson Gale

buynow big Student Loan Programs: Lower Interest Rates and Higher Loan Volume Have Increased Federal Consolidation Loan Costs.: An article from: General Accounting Office Reports & Testimony

List Price: $ 5.95

Price: [wpramaprice asin="B00082J0RO"]

[wpramareviews asin="B00082J0RO"]

Speaker Nancy Pelosi, Marc Anthony, Jennifer Lopez, and Nydia Velázquez
3926753297 c19486c7f3 Student Loan Programs: Lower Interest Rates and Higher Loan Volume Have Increased Federal Consolidation Loan Costs.: An article from: General Accounting Office Reports & Testimony

Image by Leader Nancy Pelosi
Speaker Pelosi, Congressional Hispanic Caucus Chair, Nydia M. Velázquez, and Democratic Caucus Vice Chair Xavier Becerra met with Marc Anthony and Jennifer Lopez this afternoon to discuss education in the Latino community and the historic college affordability legislation the House will consider this week.

Now more than ever, students and families need reliable, stable forms of federal student aid to pay for college. Our goal is to make our federal student loan program more cost-effective and efficient for those they were intended to serve: students and families working hard to pay for college, and our taxpayers. Reforming our student aid programs will not only made loans more dependable for students, but will generate significant savings that can be used to invest in making college more affordable and other education priorities.

This week, the House will consider the Student Aid and Fiscal Responsibility Act (HR 3221) — the single largest investment in aid to help students and families pay for college in history, and at no cost to taxpayers. The legislation reforms the system of federal student loans to save taxpayers billion – and then invests billion of those savings back into education, particularly by making college more affordable, and directs billion back to the Treasury to reduce entitlement spending. Among its many provisions, it increases the maximum Pell Grant from ,350 in 2009 to ,550 in 2010 and ,900 in 2019 and keeps interest rates low on subsidized federal student loans.

Learn more about the legislation at
www.speaker.gov/newsroom/legislation?id=0335.

Technorati Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,