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New US Law Cuts Out Private Lenders for Student Loans

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This is the VOA SpecialEnglish Education Report, from http://voaspecialenglish.com | http://facebook.com/voalearningenglishToday we talk more about the
costs of higher education in the United States. If you missed last week's report, you can find it on YouTube or at voaspecialenglish.com.
Foreign students who need financial aid generally have to seek it
from the school itself or their
own government or employer.If you follow the news, then
you know that President Obama recently signed health care reform legislation. But one of the two bills he signed into law also
made unrelated changes in the federal student loan program.
These changes will require new loans to come directly from the Department of Education. The department already makes these federally guaranteed loans for American citizens and permanent legal residents.
But since the early nineteen nineties it has also paid private lenders to provide them. Now, as of July first, all new loans will go though the direct loan program only.
Officials say the new law will save the government sixty-one billion dollars over ten years. The plan is to use more than half the savings
to provide more federal Pell Grants to needy students. A few billion will also go to schools that traditionally serve minorities and to help two-year community colleges.
The new law will reduce the most that borrowers must repay each year from fifteen percent of their income to ten percent. And the longest repayment period will be shortened from twenty-five years.
Any remaining debt will be forgiven after twenty years -- or ten if borrowers enter public service.Supporters in higher education
said the final bill did not go
far enough. Republican opponents called it an unnecessary government takeover of a private industry. Another criticism was that the financial services industry could lose about thirty thousand jobs.
The Department of Education reportedlast year that about two-thirds
of graduates from four-year c
olleges had student loan debt.
The average was about twenty-three thousand dollars.
And that's the VOA Special
English Education Report.
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(Adapted from a radio program broadcast 15Apr2010)
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