How Does Student Loan Consolidation Work?






Nowadays, the cost of higher education is getting more and more expensive. Some families may not be able to afford to send their son or daughter for further education. Getting a student loan will help.

There are 2 broad categories of student loans available. Government student loans and private student loans

Government or federal student loans are funded and administered by the US Department Of Education. It is classified under Federal Student Loans Aid Program. They have very few requirements other than you are studying in a US college or university. International students may also apply though approval is on a case by case basis.

Every year, the student loan aid program disburse nearly 60 billion dollars so it is a good choice for get a student loan from the government. Thus the interest rates are pretty low.

Private student loans are funded and administered by banks and other financial institutions. These lenders provide student loans at a higher interest rate compared to federal student loans. Some common student loans available are from Citibank and Sallie Mae

You are allowed to apply for both private and federal student loans for your education needs although I would not recommend it.

For some students who have a few student loans to repay concurrently, it can be a financial drain on their family finances. That is where student loan consolidation comes in.

Student loan consolidation basically consolidates all your student loans into one loan so that it is easier to manage and make payments. When you are getting a student loan consolidation whether from the government or the private market, your existing student loans are paid for and erased by the student loan consolidation lender. The balances are transferred to the new student loan consolidation. Thus you start a new loan and only needs to make a single payment each month.

There are many advantages to using student loan consolidation. The interest rates will be lower since it takes the average interest rates of your previous student loans. Thus due to government legislation, the maximum interest rate cannot be higher than 8.25 percent.

It becomes a lot easier to manage a single student loan and payment are easier. The repayment options are quite flexible. For federal student loan consolidation, you can opt to start repaying after you have graduated from school. There are also several other options.

Another beneficial side-effect of student loan consolidation is that it can also improves your credit score. Since you are effectively clearing all your old student loans and taking a new one, your credit score will increase and is important if plan to take other types of loans in the future.

Posted in Education Loans at February 3rd, 2010. No Comments.

Options – Student Loans Without Cosigner






When you search for financial aid regarding college funds you have a couple of choices. First you can attempt to get a scholarship, which will pay for some or all of your education. Once you have explored this option you have student loans.

The Federal government provides a few programs in regards to student loans. They have the Pell Grant, which is awarded to students in need of financial assistance. The Pell Grant does not require you to pay the money back. The government also has the Stafford Loan. The Stafford Loan must be paid back.

You may also elect to go through a private lender for your student loan. If you choose this option you will need a co signer. A private lender will examine your credit report. They will determine your risk and if you have no credit history ask that a family member co- sign your loan before they award it.

The only loan that does not require a co-signer will be the Stafford Loan. This is due to their process of lending you money. Student loans without a co- signer do not examine your credit history. Instead they will ask you what degree program you are in, what school you are going to attend, and your parents’ income. The government feels that all parents should contribute to their children’s education. So they determine what a parent can afford to provide during the year.

Then the government decides what they will award the student. Typically the Federal Loan will cover the tuition and books. In some cases it can also include student housing. However, for student housing to be awarded as part of the loan the student must live on campus. If the student does not they will need to seek an alternative for paying rent- unless their housing choice is part of the university or college in some manner.

When you obtain student loans without co- signer you generally do not get rewarded a large amount due to the risk factor. Still, there are many reasons to attempt to get a loan without a co- signer. You may not have a family member who can sign for you. You may also have a good enough credit history to pass the private student loan application without a co- signer. This latter situation is rare for undergraduate degree programs, but if you are a graduate you may find student loans without co- signer.

Posted in Education Loans at December 30th, 2009. No Comments.

Government and Federal Student Loan Programs offer Student Loans Without a Cosigner






If you are considering entering college in the near future you should be aware of the many different types of government and federal student loans. While many colleges do offer free student loan scholarships and there are various types of need-based financial aid and grants available; loans still make up the major portion of funding for the cost of education for most college students. Private student loans are also available; however the advantages of federal student loans usually far outweigh any benefits of private student loans; if you qualify to receive them.

Private college loans are credit based and may involve a co-signer from the students parent. You must qualify to receive a private student loan even though the loan program features are quite attractive. The National Student Loan Center or the NSLC offers many private low cost low rate college student loan programs. The NSLC also offers private as well as government student loans. An especially attractive student loan program offered by the NSLC, is the NSLC PLUS loan program; which gives parents of students the option to borrow up to 100% of their child’s cost of education. This is nice because the cost of higher education institutions is blasting through the roof every year! Armed with this type of higher education financing, a college student can fund everthing from room and board to books and just have to concentrate on studies.

Government and federal student loans allow college loans without a cosigner. They are non credit based student loans. Credit is not even looked at under federal college loan programs for students. Their will always be a student loan lien on the students credit until the college loan is finally paid.

Perkins Loan

One of the most common government and federal student loans is the Perkins loan. It comes with a low interest rate of only 5% and is awarded to both undergraduate and graduate students. There are no origination fees charged for this loan and it is paid back to the school because loan funds are issued directly from the school to the student from monies provided by the government. Take a look at the following facts regarding the Perkins Loan:

Need based loan; only those students with exception financial need will qualify Able to borrow up to $4,000 for each year of undergraduate study and $6,000 for each year of graduate study. Loan limits are $20,000 for two years of undergraduate study and $40,000 for graduate school.

FFELP (Federal Family Education Loan Program)

This is also another common loan and features both subsidized and unsubsidized student loans. The difference between the two is that the government will pay for the interest of the student loan while the student is in school and during the grace period of a subsidized student loan while the student is responsible for the interest in an unsubsidized student loan. Additionally, students must display a financial need to qualify for a subsidized student loan while the unsubsidized student loan is non need based.

Federal Parent Loan for Undergraduate Students (PLUS)

This type of student loan is available to parents and guardians of dependent undergraduate students. Borrowers do not need to demonstrate financial need and may borrow up to the cost of attendance; minus any amount of financial aid that may be received. Loan funds are first applied to tuition and fees. This type of government and federal student loan has a variable interest rate.

Posted in Education Loans at December 9th, 2009. No Comments.

But Governor, You CAN Create Money! Just Form Your Own Bank






“I understand that these cuts are very painful and they affect real lives. This is the harsh reality and the reality that we face. Sacramento is not Washington – we cannot print our own money. We can only spend what we have.” – Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger quoted in Time, May 22, 2009

Christmas comes early, Governor. You CAN print your own money. Fiscally solvent North Dakota is doing it . . . and so can California. Now!!!

In a May 22 article in Time titled “Billions in the Red: Fiscal Reckoning in CA,” Juliet Williams reports that since California voters have now vetoed higher taxes and further state government borrowing, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger has indicated that he intends to close the budget gap almost entirely through drastic spending cuts. The cutbacks could include laying off thousands of state workers and teachers, ending the state’s main welfare program for the poor, eliminating health coverage for about 1.5 million poor children, halting cash grants for about 77,000 college students, slashing money for state parks, and releasing thousands of prisoners before their sentences are finished. Schwarzenegger bemoaned the fact that the state could not print its own money but said it could only spend what it had.

But the state can create its own money. After all, banks do this every day. Certified, card-carrying bankers are allowed to do something nobody else can do: they can create “credit” with accounting entries on their books. As the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas explains on its website:

“Banks actually create money when they lend it. Here’s how it works: Most of a bank’s loans are made to its own customers and are deposited in their checking accounts. Because the loan becomes a new deposit, just like a paycheck does, the bank . . . holds a small percentage of that new amount in reserve and again lends the remainder to someone else, repeating the money-creation process many times.”

President Obama has also acknowledged that banks create money, through what he calls the “multiplier effect.” In a speech at Georgetown University on April 14, he said:

“[A]lthough there are a lot of Americans who understandably think that government money would be better spent going directly to families and businesses instead of banks – ‘where’s our bailout?,’ they ask – the truth is that a dollar of capital in a bank can actually result in eight or ten dollars of loans to families and businesses, a multiplier effect that can ultimately lead to a faster pace of economic growth.”

Money in a government-owned bank could give us the best of both worlds. We could have all the credit-generating advantages of private banks, without the baggage cluttering up the books of the Wall Street giants, including bad derivatives bets, unmarketable collateralized debt obligations, mark to market accounting issues, oversized CEO salaries and bonuses, and shareholders expecting a sizeable cut of the profits. A state could deposit its vast revenues in its own state-owned bank and proceed to fan them into 8 to 10 times their face value in loans. Not only would it have its own credit machine, but it would control the loan terms.

The state could lend at ½% interest to itself and to municipal governments, rolling the loans over as needed until the revenues had been generated to pay them off. According to Professor Margrit Kennedy in her 1995 book Interest and Inflation-free Money, interest composes, on average, fully half the cost of every public project. Cutting costs by 50% could make currently-unsustainable projects such as low-cost housing, alternative energy development, and infrastructure construction not only sustainable but actually profitable for the government.

If all this seems too radical and unprecedented to venture into, consider that one state has had its own bank for 90 years; and it has not only escaped the credit crunch but is doing remarkably well . . . .

THE INNOVATIVE BANK OF NORTH DAKOTA

Only three of fifty states are now solvent, meaning they have the revenues to meet their state budgets; and one of them is North Dakota. It is an unlikely candidate for the distinction. It is a sparsely populated state of less than 700,000 people, largely located in isolated farming communities afflicted with cold weather. Yet since 2000, the state’s GNP has grown 56%, personal income has grown 43%, and wages have grown 34%. The state not only has no funding issues, but this year it actually has a budget surplus of $1.2 billion, the largest it has ever had.

North Dakota boasts the only state-owned bank in the nation. The Bank of North Dakota (BND) was established by the state legislature in 1919 specifically to free farmers and small businessmen from the clutches of out-of-state bankers and railroad men. The bank’s stated mission is to deliver sound financial services that promote agriculture, commerce and industry in North Dakota. By law, the state must deposit all its funds in the bank, which pays a competitive interest rate to the state treasurer.

The state rather than the FDIC guarantees the bank’s deposits, which are plowed back into the state in the form of loans. The bank’s return on equity is about 25%, and it pays a hefty dividend to the state, which is expected to exceed $60 million this year. In the last decade, the BND has turned back a third of a trillion dollars to the state’s general fund, offsetting taxes. The former president of the BND is now the state’s governor.

The BND avoids rivalry with private banks by partnering with them. Most lending is originated by a local bank. The BND then comes in to participate in the loan, share risk, and buy down the interest rate. The BND provides a secondary market for real estate loans, which it buys from local banks. Its residential loan portfolio is now $500 billion to $600 billion. Guarantees are also provided for entrepreneurial startups, and the BND has ample money to lend to students (over 184,000 outstanding loans). It purchases municipal bonds from public institutions, and it backs loans made to new farmers at 1% interest. The BND also has a well-funded disaster loan program, which helps explain how Fargo, when struck by a disastrous flood recently, managed to avoid the devastation suffered by New Orleans in similar circumstances.

North Dakota has also managed to avoid the credit freeze, through the simple expedient of creating its own credit. It has led the nation in establishing state economic sovereignty. In California and other states, workers and factories are sitting idle because the private credit system has failed. An injection of new money from a system of publicly-owned banks on the model of the Bank of North Dakota could thaw the credit freeze and bring spring to the markets once again.

Posted in Education Loans at December 2nd, 2009. No Comments.

Student Loan Consolidation Centers






A student loan consolidation centre allows you to combine several types of federal student loans with various repayment schedules into one loan with one monthly repayment.

It is best to search for loan consolidation centers which offer minimal rates of interest. A student is qualified for a maximum of 1 percent reduction on the interest rate, if he pays on time for thirty six consecutive payments. While still attending school, students having federal direct loans are able to consolidate by means of the federal consolidation program provided by the government.

Most student consolidation loans fall into two categories. They are government student loans and private student loans. Student consolidation loan centers provide loans such as federal, Stafford, professional student loans, nursing student loans etc.

The government loan consolidation centre is providing a student loan consolidation program which allows students to consolidate outstanding education loans into a single new loan. This is not limited to a single lender. Even if multiple lenders hold the loans, one can still opt to consolidate. Two popular online student consolidation loan centers are Internet student loans centre and US student loan consolidation centre. Next student is another popular student loan consolidating centre. It is offering student loan payments lower by up to 60% or more. Sallie Mae loan consolidation centre offers federal consolidation loans. The Citibank student loan corporation is giving federal and private loan consolidation. Wachovia consolidating loan centre is giving federal Stafford loans.

Students must only consolidate loans which are of variable or changing rates such as the Stafford Loans. Never consolidate on fixed-rate loans such as Perkins loans as there won?t be any financial benefit. Interest rates for college students who are already adults or on their way to sixth month grace period will be higher.

Posted in Education Loans at November 16th, 2009. No Comments.
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