Wisconsin Lawyer
Vol. 75, No. 7, July
2002
Consolidating Law School Debt
Considering whether to consolidate your law school debt? This
economics primer for law students and lawyers gives some key facts about
federal consolidation loans and information sources you'll need to make
that decision.
by Richard D. George
Unlike many areas of law, there is little room for interpretation of
the dictates or entitlements of the Higher Education Act (the
Act)1 as they relate to Federal
Consolidation Loans.2 But while the Act
itself may be that rare piece of comparative clarity as it applies to
consolidation loans, the choice it provides borrowers most certainly is
not. That choice - to consolidate or not to consolidate - requires more
economic than legal analysis.
This article provides law students and lawyers with student loans
some of the key facts they need to make that choice. It also provides
the contact points for more detailed inquiry and process questions
beyond the scope of this primer. Importantly, however, readers must
understand that, unlike law's goal of evenhanded administration of
justice, economics treats us differentially. Accordingly, there is no
right choice to the issue of consolidation. There will be significantly
different choices based on individual circumstances and personal
preference. The following is intended only to enable informed choice,
not to influence that choice.
The Basics
A consolidation loan is one of several loan types offered under the
Act in the Federal Family Education Loan (FFELP) and William D. Ford
Direct Loan (FDLP) programs. While there are certain differences between
FFELP and FDLP consolidation loans as noted below, most of the terms and
conditions of these two programs are parallel.3 Consolidation loans offer eligible borrowers the
opportunity to consolidate all or some of their outstanding educational
loans into a single new loan, even if present student loans are of
different program or loan type or are held by more than one lender.
Almost all federal loan types are eligible for consolidation under the
Act.
Loans That Can Be Consolidated. The following
federal loan types can be consolidated under the Act:
- FFELP Subsidized Federal Stafford Loans, formerly Guaranteed Student
Loans (GSL)
- FDLP Subsidized Stafford Loans
- FFELP Unsubsidized and Nonsubsidized Federal Stafford Loans
- FDLP Unsubsidized Stafford Loans
- Federal Supplemental Loans for Students, formerly Auxiliary Loans to
Assist Students (ALAS) and Student PLUS Loans
- Federal Perkins Loans, formerly National Defense/National Direct
Student Loans (NDSL)
- Health Professions Student Loans, including Loans for Disadvantaged
Students
- Health Education Assistance Loans (HEAL)4
- Federal Insured Student Loans (FISL)
- FFELP PLUS (Parent) Loans (note that you may not consolidate your
parent's PLUS loan with your own)
- FDLP PLUS Loans
- Subsidized FFELP Consolidation Loans
- FDLP Subsidized Consolidation Loans
- Unsubsidized FFELP Consolidation Loans
- FDLP Unsubsidized Consolidation Loans, including FDLP PLUS
Consolidation Loans
- Federal Nursing Loans
Delinquent or defaulted loans can be consolidated subject to
borrowers making payment arrangements or evidencing repayment
intention.
Eligibility for Loan Consolidation. For FFELP
consolidation, you must be in repayment or in the grace period preceding
repayment on the loans chosen for consolidation. For FDLP consolidation,
you also may consolidate during the in-school period.5 If you are in repayment, you must continue to make
monthly payments to your current loan holder(s) until these loans have
been paid in full by the consolidating lender. If you are unable to make
your payments during this process, you should contact your loan holders
for alternative arrangements.
Interest Rates. The consolidation loan interest rate
is determined when the loan is originated. With the exception of any
outstanding balance representing a HEAL loan, the consolidation loan
interest is a fixed rate equal to the weighted average of the interest
rates of the loans being consolidated rounded up to the nearest
one-eighth of 1 percent but not exceeding 8.25 percent. The interest on
the portion of a consolidation loan representing a HEAL loan is a
variable rate that is adjusted annually on July 1. This rate is set at 3
percent over the bond-equivalent rate of the three-month Treasury bills
auctioned during the three months ending June 30.
Repayment Period. The length of your repayment
period depends on your total student loan debt. That amount is the total
of those loans you choose for consolidation plus "other education
loans"6 you owe, but which will not be
included in your consolidation loan. The maximum repayment
periods7 for federal consolidation loans are
as follows: less than $7,500 - 10 years; $7,500 to $9,999 - 12 years;
$10,000 to $19,999 - 15 years; $20,000 to $39,999 - 20 years; $40,000 to
$59,999 - 25 years; $60,000 or more - 30 years.
Repayment Options. In most cases, you may choose to
repay your consolidation loan through one of four repayment plans:
-
Standard Repayment Plan, up to 10 years repayment period
-
Extended Repayment Plan, 12 - 30 year repayment period
-
Graduated Repayment Plan, 12 - 30 year repayment period
-
Income Contingent Repayment Plan,
8 up
to 25 years repayment period.
These basics have not changed substantially since the 1998
reauthorization of the Higher Education Act.9 And, while the fixed rate consolidation loan
option as outlined has been available since 1998, it has only been in
the last two years that interest in and the volume of consolidation
loans have exploded.10 Two factors have
driven this growth. The first and most important has been the recent
decline in U.S. interest rates that underlie the setting of the variable
rates on FFELP and FDLP loans under the Act and, accordingly, the
weighted average rates that are locked in by a fixed rate consolidation
loan. The second factor - in large part a derivative of the first - has
been the emergence of large consolidation loan marketing concerns
running sophisticated direct mail and telemarketing campaigns directed
at recent graduates urging them not to miss current consolidation loan
opportunities.11
And therein lies the choice confronting student loan borrowers. Is
this a historic once-in-a-lifetime opportunity for borrowers to lock in
low interest rates or a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity for the
marketers? Or, as some would suggest, is it an opportunity for both?
This leads to the economics.
The Economics
The majority of student loan borrowers have a combination of
subsidized and unsubsidized FFELP or FDLP loans.12 The variable rates on these loans13 are set as follows:
Unsubsidized Loans - During grace: 91 day Treasury
bill (T-bill) plus 1.7 percent = 3.46 percent. During repayment: 91 day
T-bill plus 2.3 percent = 4.06 percent.
Subsidized Loans - During repayment: 91 day T-bill
plus 2.3 percent = 5.99 percent.
Richard D.
George is general counsel to Great Lakes Higher Education
Guaranty Corp., Madison.
All loans are variable to be adjusted every July 1 not to exceed 8.25
percent.
The 91 day T-bill reference point is the bill auctioned at the final
auction preceding June 1 of each year, and the interest rate on the
loans resets accordingly on July 1 of each year.Figure
1 provides the recent 10-year history of the resulting rates, which
have averaged 7.55 percent and are currently at 4.06 percent through
June 30, 2003. Should the choice be to lock in the current low rates
through consolidation? Figure
2 offers an overview of just how important a choice this may be with
median cumulative amounts borrowed for professional degree graduates of
public and private universities at $61,417 and $73,533, respectively,
and the difference in monthly payments as shown in Figure
3.
But while rates that may be able to be locked in today are low by
comparison to the 10-year average, the U.S. interest rate environment
may not yet definitively have shifted from its recent declines.
Figure
4 shows the trend of auctions of the reference bill since January
2002. While the most recent auctions are off the lows, the rate
environment remains volatile.14
Remember, too, it is not only rate but term that impacts how much you
may actually pay. The loan comparison at Figure
5 indicates the impact of rate and term on both the monthly payment
and total non-net-present value cost.15
The Choice
So, do you consolidate or not? Here are some final
considerations.
- Consolidation is final. Even if you become eligible to reconsolidate
through new borrowing, you will have locked in the consolidation loan
rate in the weighted average formula for the new consolidation
loan.
- Consolidation may cost more in total interest paid and in the
potential loss of existing borrower benefits on your FFELP or FDLP loans
(auto-debit discounts, prompt and continuous pay discounts, special
rebates, and so on).16 Many lenders do not
offer the same discounts on consolidation loans.
- Consolidation may require you to deal with your existing lender, and
federal regulations prohibit you from applying to more than one lender
at a time. If your FFELP loans are held by only one lender and this
lender offers consolidation loans, you must request a consolidation loan
from that lender. If multiple lenders hold your FFELP, FDLP, or other
federal loans, you may apply for a consolidation loan with a
consolidation lender of your choice.
- Consolidation may impact your interest deductions on your tax
return. Effective for the 2002 tax year, the 60-month limit on
deductibility of qualified education loan interest was eliminated and
the maximum deductibility was set at $2,500 per year at increased
adjusted gross income ranges of $50,000 - 65,000 for single returns and
$100,000 - 130,000 for joint returns.17
- How do you decide if you really need consolidation? As a rule of
thumb, if your education loan payments exceed 8 to 10 percent of your
gross monthly income and you are having trouble making payments, you may
want to consider consolidation. The 8 to 10 percent guideline should
allow borrowers to have enough income to cover rent/mortgage payments,
basic living expenses, and other debt service needs, as shown in
Figure
6.
- And timing? There is no need to rush. While many lenders can
complete a consolidation loan from application to disbursement in less
than two weeks, the process can take 10 weeks or more depending on the
number of loans and lenders involved. Consolidation loan applications
pending at the time of a rate change in the past have been given the
benefit of the new lower variable rate in calculating the average
weighted interest rate for the consolidation loan. Whether this will
occur with applications pending at July 1, 2002 is an open issue. But
why rush? The new variable rate of 3.46 percent in grace and 4.06
percent in repayment will be in effect until July 1, 2003, so there is
plenty of time to think through this very important choice. And
remember, term may be as important as rate.
Additional Resources
The choice is important. Consolidation is not the best choice for
everyone and there is a lot more information and help available. To
obtain more information on Federal Consolidation Loans (or other
programs) or an application, contact your financial aid office, your
lending institution, or the following sources:
- www.glhec.org - Web site for
Great Lakes Higher Education Corporation & Affiliates including
Great Lakes Higher Education Guaranty Corporation, 2401 International
Lane, Madison, WI 53704, or call (800) 236-6600 for more information. At
this site, you will be able to download an application, use a calculator
to estimate the monthly consolidation loan payment, get information
regarding how the interest rate will be calculated, review different
repayment options, link to the National Student Loan Clearinghouse Loan
Locator (www.nslc.org) to find out who holds your loans, and print the
Federal Consolidation Loan Information Guide.
- www.mapping-your-future.org
- A public service project of several guaranty agencies offering
financial aid information for students and families.
- www.loanconsolidation.ed.gov,
or by calling (800) 557-7392, for the U.S. Department of Education and
details on FDLP consolidation loans.
Endnotes
1The Higher
Education Act of 1965, as amended, codified at 20 U.S.C. section 1071
et seq. (the Act or the Higher Education Act), provides for the
establishment of two federal student loan programs, one federally
guaranteed through state agencies or state designated nonprofit
corporations and the second directly by the U.S. Department of
Education. There currently are 36 state or private nonprofit entities
nationwide operating as designated guaranty agencies pursuant to the
former program, which is now known as the Federal Family Education Loan
Program (FFELP). The latter program is the William D. Ford Direct Loan
Program (FDLP). Great Lakes Higher Education Guaranty Corporation
(GLHEGC) is the designated guaranty agency under the Act for FFELP in
Wisconsin, Ohio, Minnesota, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands.
2Consolidation
loans addressed by this article are limited to FFELP Consolidation Loans
and FDLP Consolidation Loans (Federal Consolidation Loans or
consolidation loans) authorized under section 428C of the Higher
Education Act codified at 20 U.S.C. section 1078-3. Many law students
and lawyers also may have nonfederally guaranteed student loans under
various alternative loan programs (ALP) offered by lenders to supplement
loans under the Act. Consolidation of ALP loans is offered by some
lenders but is beyond the scope of this article.
3Borrower
participation in the FFELP or FDLP is determined largely by the school a
borrower attends. FFELP is the larger of the two programs and serves
roughly two-thirds of borrowers nationally, including those at the U.W.
Law School. FDLP services roughly one-third of borrowers nationally,
including those at Marquette University Law School.
4Some lenders do
not consolidate HEAL loans. Contact GLHEGC or your lender for more
information.
5Consolidation is
available earlier to FDLP borrowers or FFELP borrowers attending direct
loan schools. Consolidating while in school may offer the opportunity to
lock into the lower in-school interest rate.
6"Other education
loans" are those made by an organization under a public or private
student loan program exclusively to finance the borrower's
post-secondary education. For the purposes of determining the borrower's
repayment terms, the sum of the "other education loans" may not exceed
the amount of the federal consolidation loan and may not include any
non-Title IV education loans currently in default.
7Maximum repayment
periods exclude authorized periods of deferment and forbearance.
8Income contingent
repayment is offered only in FDLP and is not available for all loan
types.
9Congress
reauthorizes the programs under the Act every five years. These
reauthorizations normally are the point at which major program
evaluation and change occur. The 2003 reauthorization is anticipated to
be the next time when review of federal consolidation loans may result
in reconversion of the fixed rate interest formula to a variable
rate.
10Consolidation
loan volume in FFELP alone rose from 308,542 loans for $6 billion in
federal fiscal year 2000 to 423,546 loans for $9.4 billion in federal
fiscal year 2001.
11The
consolidation marketers specifically target recent graduates through
direct mail and telemarketing campaigns to generate consolidation loans.
Unlike many eligible lenders with long track records in student lending
- many of which also offer consolidation loans - the marketers are newer
industry entrants that are organized to specifically target the
consolidation loan market as their principal business activity. In many
cases they are buying mailing lists and/or existing borrower databases
to enable their campaigns.
12The difference
between the two loan types is that on subsidized loans the federal
government pays the interest that accrues during deferment periods and
grace periods, whereas the borrower is responsible for paying this
interest on unsubsidized loans. Eligibility between the two loan types
is based on need and loan limits.
13The rates are
for loans disbursed on or after July 1, 1998. Loans disbursed on or
after July 1, 1994 and before July 1, 1998 have add-ons of 2.5 percent
and 3.1 percent for rates, respectively, of 4.26 percent and 4.86
percent.
14On Tuesday,
May 7, 2002, the Federal Reserve Board's federal open market committee
left the federal funds rate unchanged at 1.75 percent. The current
reference rate set at the last auction in May 2002 was 1.76 percent.
Readers can track future auction results at
http://www.publicdebt.treas.gov/servlet/OFAuctions.
15Student loan
borrowers can receive extended terms without consolidation for loans
disbursed to new borrowers after Oct. 7, 1998. If their balances exceed
$30,000, they are eligible for extended repayment, up to 25 years,
without consolidating.
16Various
borrower benefit programs are applicable from time to time in FDLP
through the U.S. Department of Education. For example, through Sept. 30,
2001, borrowers who consolidated by FDLP could receive a 0.80 percent
interest rate reduction if they made their first 12 loan payments on
time, not more than six days after the scheduled payment date. FDLP can
only offer a standard benefit for all consolidation borrowers. Eligible
lenders offering FFELP consolidation loans may offer varying incentives
that equal or exceed FDLP's interest rate reduction. Because FFELP
borrower benefits vary from lender to lender and change often, borrowers
should contact lenders directly to review current benefit offerings on
consolidation loans.
17The Economic
Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2001 (P.L. 107-16, signed
June 7, 2001) prorated deductibility in these ranges. Below these
ranges, deductibility is 100 percent subject to cap. For additional
information, visit the IRS Web site at www.irs.gov and seek out
Publication 970, Tax Benefits for Higher Education,
http://ftp.fedworld.gov/pub/irs-pdf/p970.pdf.
Wisconsin
Lawyer