By Robert Borosage
Campaign for America's Future
ourfuture.org
Interest rates on student loans will double
to 6.8 percent on July 1 unless Congress acts. But it seems
increasingly likely that the Congress will take off for the Fourth of
July recess without addressing the problem. The major sticking point:
Republicans in the House and Senate insist on gouging the kids to help
reduce the deficit.
House Republicans passed a bill
that would tie the student loan interest rate to that of the 10-year
Treasury note plus a surcharge of 2.5 percent, with rates changing each
year. That would leave families struggling to piece together financing
for college exposed to unpredictable changes in bond prices.
The Republican surcharge is designed purposefully to make money off
of students – $3.7 billion over 10 years, according to the Congressional
Budget Office – that would be used to help reduce the deficit. Some
Senate Democrats have now joined in a compromise
that would lower the surcharge, but still make money off student loans
for deficit reduction (an estimate billion dollars over 10 years).
Think about that. Republicans and Democrats have trumpeted the need
for corporate tax reform – shutting down tax dodges and lowering rates –
that would demand corporations contribute exactly $0.00, nada, nothing
to deficit reduction. The reforms would be “revenue neutral.” Companies
are stashing away
nearly $2 trillion overseas to avoid paying taxes, and the “reform”
will ask them to pay nothing more to help government meet its bills.
But students doing what we want them to do – struggling to find a way
to afford a college education – get stuck with helping to reduce the
deficit.
Shared sacrifice is for suckers.
The fact is we want students to get the advanced education and
training that they earn. We don’t want good students getting priced out
of college. There is virtually universal consensus that our social and
economic prospects will depend on the next generation getting more and
better education. And college education or advanced training is
necessary, if no longer sufficient, to reach the middle class and to
have any hope at the increasingly endangered American dream.
So why gouge the kids taking on debt to stay in school and not the
corporations secreting profits abroad to avoid taxes? Clearly corporate
lobbies and contributions speak louder in the corridors of power than
students and their families.
Sen. Elizabeth Warren has introduced legislation to give students
that same interest rate that the banks enjoy from the Federal Reserve
(0.75 percent) for a year, while Congress a broader program to make
college affordable. We subsidize bankers whose excesses blew up the
economy, why not subsidize kids struggling to pay for the education we
say they need? Conservatives dismiss the Warren proposal out of hand.
Perhaps the most sensible thing Congress can do now, preferably
before it takes off on vacation, is to extend the current rates – 3.4
percent – for two years while a serious solution is worked out. Sens.
Tom Harkin, Jack Reed, Harry Reid and Patty Murray have introduced a bill
for that purpose. But to date, Republicans in the House and Senate are
holding out to gouge the kids. And some Senate Democrats are folding to
that demand.
These are the policy choices – in this case making college less
affordable, letting corporations pay ever less in taxes – that undermine
the broad middle class and contribute to the extreme inequality that
increasingly saps our economy and corrupts our democracy.
This post originally appeared on The Huffington Post.
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