Government Student Loan Consolidation
Paying for an education is tough and without the right sources, people often need to turn to banks and financial institutions for help. The authorities also supports the payment of education by means of federal programs and special government student loans. You can thus access funds in very advantageous conditions, with almost no credit check, extended payment terms and deferment options.
Government student loans pay for tuition, school fees, computer equipment and books, room and board. The school you enroll with can be college, university or trade school. It is important to find out whether a certain school participates in the system of government student loans, and only then enroll.
Stafford loans are very popular government student loans that are meant to function as supplementary financial support to family resources, grants, scholarships or work-study situations. Depending on who pays the interest rate, two further categories of government student loans can be identified in the Stafford class. There are unsubsidized and subsidized goverment student loans.
With subsidized loans, the government pays the monthly loan interest as long as you are in school, while with unsubsidized government student loans, you need to cover the interest either during the period of the studies or deferred after graduation. Proof of financial need is the main eligibility criterion for subsidized loans. The students who correspond to this situation usually come from families with an adjusted gross income under $50,000.
Government student loans are in many people’s opinion the only chance of getting a good education. In fact, so far, this is the best thing that has ever happened in terms of governmental implication in people’s lives.
Make no mistake, government student loans have to be paid back, but the terms offered for the repayment are more advantageous, and it is supposed that after graduation one has a higher salary than they would have had without college education. Another issue that requires clarification here is the difference between loans and grants.
With grants, you don’t have to pay the money back. Grants help youngsters in need to pay for half-time or full-time college education. Government student loans work in a pretty similar way, but as mentioned before, you have to pay the money back according to the repayment schedule.
This entry was posted on Tuesday, December 1st, 2009 at 7:33 pm and is filed under Personal Finance. Follow the comments through the RSS 2.0 feed. Comments are closed, leave a trackback from your site.