NEW YORK – This holiday weekend, our federal lawmakers headed home to their leafy country clubs and, unable to come up with a coherent long-term plan on how to support low-income college students, let the interest rates for government-backed students loans double — from 3.4 percent to 6.8 percent.

Now that our elected officials have gotten back to Washington, they are widely expected to agree on some kind of retroactive yearlong extension of the low rates. If all goes as expected, the issue will come up again in 2014.

But their failure to agree yet on how much students should pay to borrow money to go to college hints at our deep confusion about a darker reality: A generation of smart, ambitious, motivated young people are trying to better themselves through education. They are getting trapped in a maze of debt from which many will never emerge. And while there is plenty of suffering to go around, the people who will suffer the most are from poor and lower-middle-income families.

Are we OK with this?

Let’s look at how this works. Americans now owe more than a trillion dollars in student debt — more than they owe on auto loans and credit cards. On average, people with student loans owe about $24,000. About 13 percent of people with student debt owe more than $50,000.

Those numbers are dismissed by a lot of folks who say, “Feh! Stop moaning! If you end up owing 50 grand to get a sheepskin from Middlebury or Vanderbilt, it’s a good investment.”

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Here’s how that thinking goes: With your newly minted degree, you can get a decent job, live with your parents for a couple of years and pay down your debt to a manageable level. Presto!

To which I have this to say: “Sweetie. Honey. With all due respect, do you know anyone who isn’t rich?” Because once you step out of that bubble of affluence, college and college debt look pretty different.

Here’s how it works when you aren’t sitting on a big cushion of cash:

Because your family is not wealthy, you live in an underserved neighborhood and the local public school didn’t prepare you for college in the way that students from affluent suburbs are prepared.

You take the SATs or ACTs and you get that message loud and clear. (So much for a merit scholarship with those test scores!)

So you work for a while, and when you are good and sick of working a mind-numbing minimum-wage job, you end up taking loans to attend not Vanderbilt or Middlebury, but a local public or regional private college where admission standards are more flexible but the graduation rates are often less than 50 percent.

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By sophomore year, the dreams, determination and focus that got you to sign for those student loans is replaced by pervasive hopelessness. After two semesters, you still can’t get out of remedial math class and move forward in your major. And these days, because you are only working part time, you don’t even have enough money to buy gas to get you back and forth to campus.

You drop out with 20 grand in debt. And you know what? Your mom is selling her house (see mortgage crisis, 2008.) You look around at your job options, which are — crushingly — the same job you had before you borrowed all that money.

Now you are nearly 30. Middle-class and affluent kids are getting married and starting to save for a house. (Make no mistake; if they are living in a city, where the good jobs are, their parents will help on the down payment.) You, however, are stuck in the debt maze.

Republican lawmakers say that low-cost student loans encourage colleges to inflate their prices. Democrats say we have to continue to offer low-interest loans to prepare the workforce of tomorrow. But neither side, in my view, is being innovative enough.

The options for our hardworking young people of limited means are way too narrow. They are being set up for failure, and once they stumble, the penalties are too severe. Playing politics with student loans does a disservice to people who need and deserve more helpful and forward-looking government policies.

Peg Tyre is a journalist and author of the books “The Good School” and “The Trouble With Boys.”

 


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