1

Refinancing my mortgage is easy: How about my student loans?

Campus Progress wants students to be able to take advantage of low interest rates available for mortgages and car loans.

To view this content, Javascript must be enabled and Adobe Flash Player must be installed.

Get Adobe Flash player

The average interest on a 30-year, fixed-rate mortgage right now is just over 3.5 percent. For most outstanding federal student loans?

“The vast majority of it is actually over 6.8 percent,” says Tobin Van Ostern, deputy director of Campus Progress, a liberal policy group. “So it’s many times higher than most other loans that are out there right now.”

This week the group launched a campaign urging the federal government to let student loan borrowers refinance at lower rates.

There’s a reason mortgages and car loans are cheaper, says Mark Kantrowitz, publisher of the financial aid website finaid.org. The loans are secured by collateral. If you don’t pay, the lender can take your car.

“If you default on a federal education loan, they can’t repossess your education,” he says.

Campus Progress says cutting interest rates to 5 percent would put about $14 billion in borrowers’ pockets this year alone -- money they would pour back into the economy.

The federal government, though, would lose billions in revenue.

About the author

Amy Scott is Marketplace’s education correspondent covering the K-12 and higher education beats, as well as general business and economic stories.
Bernau's picture
Bernau - Feb 15, 2013

“If you default on a federal education loan, they can’t repossess your education,”

Anybody else sign papers saying that if you don't pay your student loan the government can withhold your taxes and garnish your wages until the amount is paid back in full plus interest? Cause I remember signing myself away like that. They may not be able to "repossess my education," but the government can force the payback. That's much more secure than a car or house loan and the interest should reflect that.

If people are "getting away" with not paying their student loans it is because the government isn't enforcing their own policies. Big surprise there, but it shouldn't be an excuse to keep student loan interest ridiculously high for how secure they should be.