3 Potential Student Loan Changes To Eye In 2014

More Changes To Student Loans Could Be On The Way
WASHINGTON, DC - JUNE 27: Sen. Tom Harkin, D-IA) (L), and Sen. Jack Reed,(D-RI) look at a chart on student loans during a news conference on Capitol Hill, June 27, 2013 in Washington, DC. The Senators talked about solutions to keep student loans from doubling on July 1st. (Photo by Mark Wilson/Getty Images)
WASHINGTON, DC - JUNE 27: Sen. Tom Harkin, D-IA) (L), and Sen. Jack Reed,(D-RI) look at a chart on student loans during a news conference on Capitol Hill, June 27, 2013 in Washington, DC. The Senators talked about solutions to keep student loans from doubling on July 1st. (Photo by Mark Wilson/Getty Images)

This article comes to us courtesy of U.S. News & World Report, where it was originally published.

Student loans garnered a lot of attention in 2013. Interest rates on federal student loans became a political playing card – again – and debt loads and borrower default rates captured headlines.

The new year could be just as tumultuous for college borrowers. The pending reauthorization of the Higher Education Act could usher in myriad changes to federal student loan programs and interest rates for 2014-2015 loans likely won't remain the same.

Below are three potential student loan changes borrowers should keep an eye on in 2014.

1. PLUS loans: Unlike Stafford loans, approval of Parent Direct PLUS and graduate PLUS loans are subject to credit history. Borrowers with a foreclosure, bankruptcy filing, repossession or loan default within five years cannot receive a PLUS loan. Neither can those with an account that is more than 90 days delinquent.

In 2011, the Department of Education added additional criteria – no loans charged off or sent to collections. The adjustments meant thousands of PLUS loan borrowers were denied, despite being approved the prior year, Rachel Fishman, a policy analyst for the New America Foundation, notes in a January 2014 report.

"It left students scrambling in the middle of their academic careers, trying to find the funds to remain in school," Fishman said during a Jan. 8 panel on PLUS loans held at the Washington, D.C., foundation. "That never should have happened."

But the department may not have the authority to make changes to the regulations governing PLUS loans, says financial aid expert Mark Kantrowitz, publisher of Edvisors.com.

Congress is set to take the issue up next month and the result could go several ways, Kantrowitz says.

"From one point of view, they are looking at potentially making those two changes official," he says. "They could block those two changes. They could make other changes in eligibility."

Those other changes could include using debt-to-income ratios and FICO credit scores to determine eligibility for federal PLUS loans. These adjustments would help reduce default rates, Kantrowitz says, but could also shut out a larger portion of students and parents.

2. Interest rates: Congress battled over student loan interest rates in 2013, finally agreeing on market-based rates in late July. While the agreement lowered interest rates from borrowers at the onset, the respite was only temporary.

"Rates are going to go up," says Kantrowitz. "That's a given."

It is a given because interest rates on federal direct loans are now tied to the 10-year Treasury note. As the value of that note increases, so do the rates on Stafford loans, Parent Direct PLUS loans and graduate PLUS loans.

The exact rate charged to 2014-2015 borrowers won't be determined until June 1, but will then be locked in based on the Treasury note yield. On June 1, 2013, the yield was 2.16 percent. On Jan. 2, 2014, the yield was 3 percent.

While most experts anticipate the Treasury yield will rise over last year's, it's difficult to anticipate by how much.

Some experts predict the Treasury rate will rise as high as 3.75 percent, while others have a more conservative forecast of 2.96 percent. Either way, students taking out federal loans for the upcoming school year should expect to pay more.

3. Student loan counseling: Entrance and exit counseling is already mandatory for federal student loan borrowers, but the process leaves a lot to be desired, students and experts say.

"It simply involved checking off boxes saying that I agree to certain terms," Simon Tam, an MBA student at Marylhurst University in Oregon, told U.S. News in July. "There is no opportunity to interact at all."

The Smarter Borrowing Act, a bill introduced by Sen. Tom Harkin, D-Iowa, could make the counseling more comprehensive by requiring colleges and universities to send students annual updates on their balance, interest rates and repayment options.

The bill would also require colleges with higher than average default rates to ramp up their counseling to include financial literacy and budgeting.

"This is a very solid piece of legislation," says Kantrowitz, who notes that the bill has enough bipartisan support to be included in reauthorization of the Higher Education Act, which expires at the end of 2014.

Whether Congress can come together to pass a new iteration of the Higher Education Act this year is still a big question mark, he says.

"The last reauthorization was originally supposed to occur in 2002," Kantrowitz says. "They passed 13 extension bills until it was finally passed in 2008, and this Congress is at least as contentious."

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