It’s been nearly two weeks since interest rates on student loans have doubled, but the Senate still hasn’t managed to pass a deal to fix them–even though both parties say the new 6.8% rate on lower-income borrowers is unacceptable.
What’s holding everything up? The central problem is that keeping interest rates low for students costs a bunch of money, and legislators still can’t agree on who’s going to pay the price.
Republicans refuse to have the government spend more to ward off the rate hike, while Democrats insist there has to be a cap on interest rates to protect future borrowers from an undue burden. These competing demands have created a game of legislative tug of war, with no clear resolution in sight. The Senate has repeatedly rejected short-term fixes to put off the debate, and liberal advocates have resigned themselves to the fact that interest rates for students are likely to rise even higher down the road.
The latest bipartisan compromise in the Senate contains the rate cap that Democrats have been insisting on, tying interest costs to the 10-year Treasury rate and setting the maximum rate for borrowers at 8.25% for undergraduate and 9.25% for graduate Stafford loans, according to Senate aides. That’s even higher than the current 6.8% rate that politicians have deemed unacceptable, and the Atlantic’s Jordan Weismann has estimated much rates will rise in the future (See chart below). But the plan would lower borrowing costs in the short term, which would give both parties something to crow about.
The deal fell apart, though, because Republicans deemed the price tag unacceptable: The Congressional Budget Office said the plan would cost $22 billion, according to Senate aides and policy analysts familiar with the negotiations. Republicans have insisted on a plan that would actually reduce the deficit, leading them to dismiss the plan out of hand, and the centrist negotiators say it’s still critical to keep costs in check.
“All members are committed to finding a long-term solution that is market-based and budget neutral with caps to protect students from future rate increases,” said Crystal Canney, a spokeswoman for Sen. Angus King, a Maine Independent, who’s trying to negotiate a compromise along with Sens. Joe Manchin (D-Wv.), Richard Burr (R-NC), and Tom Coburn (R-Okla.).
Senate aides say there may be another path forward: rather than setting different interest rates for undergraduate and graduate borrowers, Congress could make unsubsidized Stafford borrowers pay slightly higher interest rates than subsidized ones. That would likely lower the price tag, as there’s a very big pool of undergraduates who take out unsubsidized Stafford loans. It would also make higher-income students pay more in interest costs than lower-income ones, as subsidized Stafford loans go only to students who demonstrate financial need.









