Yale Daily News

Updated: Saturday, November 21, 2009 4:25 p.m.

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In crunch, professional-student loans tighten

Decline in ‘borrower benefits’ likely to burden professional students most because of high tuition rates

Staff Reporter
Published Thursday, March 27, 2008

While most Yale undergraduates will be celebrating the end of student loans next year, many of their graduate-student counterparts will still be taking out tens of thousands of dollars in loans — a process that tightening credit markets have made even more stressful.

Although graduate- and professional-school students, like undergraduates, will have no difficulty obtaining federal loans, the special incentives, or “borrower benefits,” that often accompany them are slowly eroding away, according to market analysts. This loss adds up to over thousands of dollars in loans, Student...

#1 By concerned med student 9:36a.m. on March 27, 2008

This is indeed a grave problem. More and more medical students are being forced to make career choices based on economic concerns and this trend is pushing people away from primary care (where they are perhaps most needed) into the various subspecialties. Additionally, the prohibitive cost of medical school is preventing those from the lower socioeconomic classes from becoming physicians. Following is some information about the ways in which the current administration is making the problem worse:

Typically up to 2/3 of residents and fellows (the positions that medical students take after graduation) are eligible to defer payments on their student loans via the 20/220 pathway for economic hardship deferment; this pathway is in jeopardy.

On September 27, 2007, President Bush signed into law HR 2669, the College Cost Access and Reduction Act. HR 2669, now Public Law 110-84, eliminated the 20/220 pathway for economic hardship deferment. The DOE is formulating the new regulations to implement Public Law 110-84. In previous statements, DOE had indicated that they would be maintaining the 20/220 pathway. The DOE has reversed its position, and announced that it will eliminate the 20/220 pathway as of July 1, 2009. They cited the prohibitive cost of maintaining the 20/220 pathway.

Please check here for more information:
www.ama-assn.org/go/loandeferment

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