[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 107 (Wednesday, July 24, 2013)]
[Senate]
[Pages S5855-S5856]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
STUDENT LOAN DEBT
Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, later today we will consider a student
loan bill that will affect 11 million students across America.
On July 1 the interest rate paid by students for their student loans
doubled; it went from 3.4 percent to 6.8 percent. We know students are
graduating with more and more debt. We also know the cost of that
debt--the interest rate--makes a big difference in their lives.
Sometimes they postpone important life decisions because of student
loan debt.
My daughter has a business in New York with two employees who are
paying off student loans. She said the biggest worry they have from
month to month is making that payment. I understand that too. After
taking a look at the increase in debt, we find that student loan debt
has now surpassed credit card debt in America. It is more than $1
trillion, and it is growing faster than any other form of debt. It is
an indication of an indebtedness we need to take seriously. We will
have a chance to do that this afternoon.
There are many different points of view on what to do with student
loans. Some people say that the government should be involved but it
really should be a market-based system. Others say, no, the government
should be involved and it should be a subsidy. We should help students
go to school. We should find ways to keep the cost of education
affordable, and lowering interest rates is one way to do it.
We will have two amendments this afternoon. Senator Jack Reed and
Senator Elizabeth Warren are offering an amendment that will cap the
interest rate on student loan debts at 6.8 percent for most debts
affecting undergraduate students and 7.9 percent for other loans. To
put a cap on that interest rate means we have to subsidize. In other
words, as we project out what the cost of student loans will be based
on market interest rates, a subsidy is necessary to honor that cap.
The second proposal will be from Senator Sanders of Vermont, and his
approach is a little different. He basically says we ought to sunset
any changes we make to student interest rates today after 2 years and
then revert back to the current 6.8 percent rate. That ends up costing
about $20 billion. Senator Sanders may or may not offer a means to pay
for that. I believe, from some statements he has made publicly, he
believes that should be a debt of the government, but I will leave it
to him to make his explanation.
At the end of the day, after those two amendments are considered, we
will come down to one basic decision we have to make as a body,
Democrats and Republicans. It can be simply stated, and here is what it
is: Should the student loan interest rate--currently at 6.8 percent for
most students--stay at 6.8 percent or be reduced to 3.8 percent? That
is the question.
If we pass the Bipartisan Student Loan Certainty Act, which I have
worked with Republicans and Democrats to craft, the interest rate for
undergraduate students--that is almost two-thirds of all students--goes
down 3 percent, from 6.8 percent to 3.8 percent. I won't mislead my
colleagues. It is based on a 10-year Treasury rate and will be
projected over a period of time. As general interest rates go up, so
will the student loan interest rate from 3.8 percent, but we put a cap
on it and say that rate can go no higher than 8.25 percent in a 10-year
period of time, protecting students even if interest rates go up
dramatically. So there it is.
The final vote will be whether to reduce the student loan interest
rate from 6.8 to 3.8 and to cap it for two-thirds of the students at
8.25 percent--no higher than that--for the next 10 years. Students who
are receiving subsidized loans won't have to pay the interest while
they are in school, and they will have some other benefits at the end
of the day. What we are setting out to do is to make student loans
affordable for students and to make sure families are not burdened with
loans they can't pay back.
I hope my colleagues, no matter what their philosophy on student
loans--whether they believe they should be market-based or government-
subsidized--realize that at the end of the day we have a very clear
choice to make: Stick with the 6.8 percent interest rate or lower it to
3.8 percent.
What does that mean for students, the 3-percent difference? We
calculated it. We looked at the average undergraduate student in
America, and here is what it means: If we don't lower it to 3.8
percent, if we keep it at 6.8 percent, it means that student, over the
course of 4 years of undergraduate education, will pay an additional
$2,000 in interest. Why would we want to do that? Why at the end of the
day would we want to keep interest rates at 6.8 percent and penalize
students with $2,000 in interest over the next 4 years? That is the
wrong thing to do.
I urge my colleagues, when the bipartisan alternative comes up, to
vote for it. Even if my colleagues believe it should be a government
subsidy, which we have not been able to enact, or if they believe it
should be market-based--either way, this is a better outcome.
Personally, I hope this isn't the end of the story. Senator Tom
Harkin of Iowa chairs the HELP Committee--the education committee--and
he is going to come to the floor soon to start working on the
reauthorization of higher education. We understand it is more than the
interest rate that is
[[Page S5856]]
causing a problem for students; it is the cost--the cost--of higher
education.
I went to Georgetown Law School. I couldn't get in there today with
the standards they have. Currently, I am told it costs over $50,000 a
year to go to this law school--$50,000 a year for 3 years, in addition
to undergraduate debt. Well, a person better get a darn good job at a
Wall Street firm afterward because they will face a mountain of debt.
They are not alone. All across the United States we are seeing tuition
rates go up--even at public universities--to record levels.
We have to find a better way to prepare the next generation of
leaders in America. The old model of 4 years of undergraduate and then
graduate school and professional school has gone beyond the reach of
most students and families.
Keep in mind, too, that student loans are different from most other
debt. Student loans are not dischargeable in bankruptcy. The debt a 19-
year-old student and his family sign up for is a debt that can trail
them to the grave. We have cases where people are signing up to
basically guarantee the loans of granddaughters to make sure their
granddaughter can go to college, and then the granddaughter either
drops out or can't find a job and defaults on the student loan, and
they proceed to collect it from grandma. I am not making this up. They
are garnishing the grandmother's Social Security benefits to pay for
student loans she guaranteed for her granddaughter. That is how
ruthless this industry is and how tough this debt is.
We have a chance today to make this debt more affordable for students
now, to reduce the interest rate from 6.8 percent to 3.8 percent and
cap it over the next 10 years at 8.25 percent. I won't mislead my
colleagues. In some debt categories of borrowing--graduate students and
parent PLUS loans--in the second 4 years the interest rates go up more,
and many of those who borrow in those categories are going to find 5
years from now that they are facing a much tougher debt situation. I
won't mislead my colleagues on that at all.
I think we can't leave the conversation today and say we are finished
and we don't need to talk about it anymore. Let's give the students and
families the help they need today, but let's not stop on this issue. On
the higher education reauthorization bill, we will have a chance to
address overall student indebtedness and affordability for families.
Let me close by saying that the worst offenders--the worst
offenders--when it comes to college loans are the for-profit schools.
People may not know much about them unless a person is 18 or 19 years
old and they can't escape them when they go on the Internet. They are
trying to sign up students to for-profit schools, many of which are
worthless--worthless.
The numbers to remember are three, and they are going to be on the
final, so listen carefully. Twelve percent of all students coming out
of high school go to for-profit schools. Twenty-five percent of all
Federal aid to education goes to for-profit schools. Forty-seven
percent of all student loan defaults are students at for-profit
schools. So what is the message there? They are raking in Federal
dollars at twice the rate they should, and their students are failing
at a rate greater than any other category of schools. Their students
are failing to get a job, failing to graduate, failing to pay back
their loans.
For-profit schools are a national scandal. We need to deal with them
in the higher education reauthorization. I know Senator Harkin has held
hearings on these schools, and he understands this. We need to take an
honest look at the schools that are misleading our students and their
families. These schools aren't worth the accreditation, they certainly
aren't worth the time, and they aren't worth the debt they are pushing
on students.
Let me make a marketing pitch, if I may. I say it in Illinois, and I
will say it anywhere. If you are graduating from high school and not
sure where to go, what you want to do, what you want to major in, your
safest bet is your community college. It is nearby. It is affordable.
It offers many options. In most States the hours are transferable to
other colleges. It is a good way to start your college education. Also,
for vocational training, community college is a smart investment. When
it comes to these for-profit schools, exactly the opposite is true.
So when we reauthorize higher education, let's come up with a good
student loan approach that builds on what we can vote for today, but
let's also start looking at the overall cost of higher education,
sensitive to the needs of families today to make sure their kids have a
fighting chance for the best jobs in America.
I travel all around my State, and I go to businesses. I asked my
staff: Find me businesses that have done well in the recession and are
hiring today. I find a lot of good businesses, including Kraft Foods in
Champaign, IL. Each year they need over 100 industrial maintenance
engineers--people to keep the assembly lines running--who understand
how to repair things, understand computers, and are good employees. The
starting wage for those employees, by and large, is $50,000 a year.
That is the average wage in my State. Think about it--a starting wage.
Well, what is holding them back? Why didn't they fill the jobs? The
students coming out of high school are not ready. They do not have the
math skills or the computer skills. But if they go to Parkland
Community College in Champaign, they can acquire it affordably.
That makes sense. That is a way to bring a student out of high school
with a year or two of good training at a community college and have a
good job and opportunity for a lifetime. It is a great place to start.
Those jobs are all over my State and all over America.
So let's focus on affordability in higher education, on training for
vocational skills that give people a chance to become skilled
apprentices and beyond, and let's make sure today that we do not miss
this opportunity to reduce interest rates.
A ``no'' vote on the bipartisan plan will keep interest rates for
students at 6.8 percent. A ``yes'' vote will lower the interest rates
for two-thirds of students to 3.8 percent and save those students
$2,000 over the next 4 years. It caps that interest rate at 8.25
percent. That is a guarantee that no matter what happens to interest
rates, these students will be protected.
This is a pretty basic choice. We need a strong bipartisan vote.
Regardless of your philosophy on what student loans should look like,
keep these families and students in mind. If you are frustrated with
the legislative process, frustrated that Congress is not doing it
exactly the way you want to have it done, do not take it out on the
students and their families. Give them a break today with a ``yes''
vote for the bipartisan bill.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Ms. Heitkamp). The Senator from Washington.
Mrs. MURRAY. Madam President, what is the pending business?
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senate is currently in morning business.
Mrs. MURRAY. Madam President, I yield back the remaining time in
morning business.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
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