CBS News 
            Botches Simple Math
            Interest rate on student 
            loans will go up, but not double, on July 1. 
by Todd 
            Drenth
June 27, 2005 
            	
     
            The CBS Evening News added hype to the July 1 interest rate hike 
            for student loans on its June 26, 2005, broadcast. 
     Trish Regan reported that 2005 graduates and current 
            students will experience sticker shock when they see the interest 
            on their debt nearly double, from 2.9 percent to 4.8 percent. 
     The increase wont amount to doubling, however. 
            Rising from 2.9 percent to 4.8 percent is a 66 percent increase. For 
            the rate to double, it would have to increase by 100 percent, 
            raising it to 5.8 percent. 
     Washington Post finance columnist Michelle Singletary 
            put it accurately in a June 20 column: Effective July 1, the new 
            variable rate on federally backed student loans will increase by 
            1.93 percentage points to 4.70 percent for current students and 
            recent graduates. 
     Without a doubt, the rate increase on student loans is 
            of serious concern to current students and recent graduates, many 
            who finish school with tens of thousands of dollars in student loan 
            debt. As CBS anchor Mika Brzezinski said, time is money for those 
            who are able to consolidate their loans at the present historically 
            low rates before they increase on July 1. 
     However, unlike Singletarys column and an article by 
            Susan Tompor in the Detroit Free Press June 27, CBS provided no 
            information on how students could go about consolidating their debt 
            or find more information. And while most college students are used 
            to waiting until the last minute, consolidating student loan debt is 
            a little different than cramming for a test or putting off a paper 
            until the night before its due.
     The current situation is unique not only because the 
            historically low interest rates are about to increase for the first 
            time in five years, but because the Department of Education is 
            helping students under the Federal Family Education Loan Program to 
            take advantage of the low rates by allowing students to consolidate 
            while still in school. By law, federal loans can only be 
            consolidated once, as Singletary noted, which makes the present 
            opportunity particularly valuable to current students.
     In Tompors article, Sallie Mae spokeswoman Erin 
            Korsvall pointed out the financial consequences of failing to act 
            quickly to take advantage of the low rates. According to Korsvill, a 
            2005 graduate with $20,000 in student loans will pay $6,321 in 
            interest at the current rate of 2.875 percent over 20 years. 
            Meanwhile, if the same recent graduate waits until after the rates 
            jump to 4.75 percent on July 1, the slacker gets socked with 
            $11,019 in interest, as Tompor put it. CBS also showed the 
            consequences of waiting to consolidate. 
     The biggest shock may come to the students who finally 
            experience the price of procrastination  or rely on the media to do 
            the math.
     For more information on loan consolidation, see
            
            Michelle Singletarys column: 
            and
            
            Susan Tompors column: