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Sidenote:
The federal government REALLY needs to think about market regulating when it pertains to college tuition. Private institutions included.
I'm sure these universities can't justify these costs.
Sidenote:
The federal government REALLY needs to think about market regulating when it pertains to college tuition. Private institutions included.
I'm sure these universities can't justify these costs.
Yeah it is getting out of hand. They have some plans for the public institutions. But I doubt you can regulate a private one. Those schools don't rely on federal or state monies to stay open.
shat, man those elite private schools get a lot and I mean a lot of Federal money.
Yeah, but aren't they getting money because their top faculty know how to obtain Federal Grants? The Federal government isn't going to make Yale, Harvard, Duke, Stanford, Georgetown or any of those kind of private schools lower their tuition. No way I believe that will happen. Now the public universities I can see coming under the gun. But those private institutions will operate like always.
That is true and I agree. I am just saying, schools who go higher than CPI should risk Title IV eligibility. It will effect most schools. Should the federal govt really be chalking out $150k anyways so some kid can go to Harvard?
That is true and I agree. I am just saying, schools who go higher than CPI should risk Title IV eligibility. It will effect most schools. Should the federal govt really be chalking out $150k anyways so some kid can go to Harvard?
That is true and I agree. I am just saying, schools who go higher than CPI should risk Title IV eligibility. It will effect most schools. Should the federal govt really be chalking out $150k anyways so some kid can go to Harvard?
That, and Federal Student loans are backed by the government, not paid up front by the government. There is a difference.
If you speaking about a loan, why not? The student has to repay the load. I believe Harvard pays for students who parents income is below 65K from their endowment.
Huh,
What are you talking about man. Every Federal Student Loan now comes directly from the government. The FFEL program ended in 2010.
Huh? So they don't use Sallie Mae, ACS, etc anymore?
Sallie Mae and ACS are still servicing their loans but all new loans now come directly from the Federal Govt per the Student Aid and Fiscal Responsibility Act of 2009. It was a rider on the Healthcare bill.
Personally, I don't think that the original intent of loans was to subsidize middle class families to take out mega loans to go to uber expensive elite colleges. As far as repaying the loans, have you looked at the delinquency rates lately? Check out the report the federal reserve put out about Student loan debt last month.
You are correct about Harvard and I was just using them as an example. At some point, the feds are going to have to seriously consider the risk of loans they make to individuals for school. The current system only encourages schools to raise their tuition.
Most middle class parents only qualify for very small federal student loans based upon their income, so they get their education loans from banks. By the way the federal government is good at wasting money, see the current wars we having been waging now for more than a decade. Politicians only talk about saving money when the are campaigning.
Have you heard of parent-plus loans? If you are taking out private directly from the banks (no more FFEL remember) then I really would be careful because the numbers behind those are not good.
The rest I agree with you on.
I'm not familiar with parent-plus. After completing the FAS application for my son we only qualified for $3000 federal loan for the year, which I felt was no help so I didn't apply for it. His freshman year I took out an education loan from my credit union, the next 3 years I wrote checks. I don't know what you mean by the numbers behind then not being good.
I'm not familiar with parent-plus. After completing the FAS application for my son we only qualified for $3000 federal loan for the year, which I felt was no help so I didn't apply for it. His freshman year I took out an education loan from my credit union, the next 3 years I wrote checks. I don't know what you mean by the numbers behind then not being good.
Personally, I don't think that the original intent of loans was to subsidize middle class families to take out mega loans to go to uber expensive elite colleges. As far as repaying the loans, have you looked at the delinquency rates lately? Check out the report the federal reserve put out about Student loan debt last month.
You are correct about Harvard and I was just using them as an example. At some point, the feds are going to have to seriously consider the risk of loans they make to individuals for school.The current system only encourages schools to raise their tuition.
That is why President Obama's speech about coming down on schools that keep raising their tuition is interesting. Here in Louisiana you have Governor Jindal cutting higher education funding like hot butter and wants them to raise their tuition by 5% each year. That will be in direct conflict with Obama's plan.