Why the Student Loan Problem Is Hard to Fix
June 14, 2013— -- Mom and Dad are fighting again about what's best for the family and the kids are about to get hurt.
That basically sums up the current student loan mess in Washington, D.C.
Interest rates on new subsidized Stafford loans, available to financially needy undergraduate students, are set to double from 3.4 percent to 6.8 percent on July 1. Interest rates on current loans will stay the same, but students who take out new loans will be impacted.
About seven million people stand to get hit.
Republicans, Democrats and the White House all agree that's a bad thing.
So why is there a very real possibility that it might still happen?
Because while lawmakers say they want to help students, they can't agree on how to do it and are taking every opportunity to place blame elsewhere.
Details of the different proposals being offered by varying factions are here.
Basically, some Democrats want to freeze the interest rate at 3.4 percent and pay for the difference by closing what they say are tax loopholes that benefit the wealthiest Americans. They say it's better to address the issue when Congress looks at the laws surrounding student loans set to expire later this year.
Speaker of the House John Boehner (R-Ohio) said it's Democrats who are picking a "fake fight" during his weekly press briefing on Thursday. He took the opportunity to tie the impasse to sluggish job growth.
Arguably related? Sure, but it's also a key Republican talking point and Boehner wasn't about to pass up a good opportunity to convince voters Democrats have got it all wrong.
Obama has countered that he's pushing back because the Republicans have a bad plan. The president said reforms should lock in interest rates for the life of each loan, which the Republican House plan doesn't do.
Obama says interest rates could skyrocket as the economy improves. And naturally he's taken the opportunity to drive home one of his own talking points, which is that Republicans are looking out for the wealthy and not everyday Americans.
The White House also sent Policy Advisor Roberto Rodriguez into the ring (via a Twitter chat, naturally) to call on Congress to act.
"If Dems and Repubs both don't want rates to double, what's the problem? #dreamsnotdebt #dontdoublemyrate," asked one reasonable young woman.
The response?
Simply "Congress should come together on a bill that keeps rates low and doesn't ask students to fund deficit reduction."
Really heavy on the specifics there, White House.
If this was a boxing match we'd be in a neckbrace with all the back and forth punches, right?
Let's bring in the level-headed, nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office for a minute.
If the rate is kept at 3.4 percent, the CBO says, it would "increase the cost of the student loan program to the government by $41 billion between 2013 and 2023."
Obama says that could be countered by closing tax loopholes that benefit the rich. The GOP says keeping the rate the same would simply be piling up more debt to pay for a continued rate freeze.
So what if a miracle occurs and Congress actually agrees to a proposal making the rounds on Capitol Hill?
It's hard to say because they're each different.