Student loans are a
major crisis for men and women who have left college, either with or
without a degree and incurred massive debts while in college. We will leave aside the morality of a society
that requires a college education for good jobs, and then burdens young people
with huge debts to get that education and focus instead on the issue of student
loan interest rates. Without
Congressional action they
are scheduled to rise significantly.
Republicans said they
wanted to extend Democratic legislation passed in 2007 that temporarily reduced
interest rates for the low- or middle-income undergraduates who receive
subsidized Stafford loans to 3.4 percent from
6.8 percent.
So what is the
problem if both Republicans and Democrats both want to extend the law that
produced lower rates? Republicans, those
supposedly fiscal conservatives who want a balanced budget, don’t like paying
for the reduced interest rates.
Senate
Republicans on Tuesday blocked consideration of a Democratic bill to prevent
the doubling of somestudent loan interest
rates, leaving the legislation in limbo less than two months before rates on
subsidized federal loans are set to shoot upward.
The Democrats have
proposed offsetting the lost revenue by closing a tax loophole that allows
certain investor/business executives to avoid paying the Medicare portion of
the payroll tax on a large part of their income from an S corporation (want
details, no you don’t). But since this
would very slightly increase the taxes on very wealthy people Republicans
naturally said no.
But the really unique
thing is that having blocked the measure Republicans feel they can campaign
on the issue, by blaming Democrats.
Republicans
made clear they would go on offense, blaming Democrats if interest rates
doubled July 1.
Will such a strategy work? Sure, given the hundreds of millions
Republicans have at their disposal from billionaires who can now make
unlimited, and in some cases anonymous campaign contributions and ads, of
course it will work.
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