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Jun 09, 2009 -- The Clark Smart approach to borrowing for college

Do you need to borrow to fund college education for yourself or your child? Be sure you take the Clark Smart approach to borrowing as detailed below.

Subsidized Stafford loans are the single best source of money you can borrow. The interest is picked up by taxpayers while you're in school. For the 2009-10 school year, subsidized Stafford loans will carry a fixed interest rate of 5.6%. The rate will be lower still at 4.5% next year, and all the way down to 3.4% the following year.

Freshman can borrow $3,500 annually; sophomores can borrow $4,500 each year; and juniors and seniors cap out at $5,500.

Once you exhaust your subsidized Stafford stockpile, you want to move on to unsubsidized Stafford loans, which are now at 6.8%. Remember, though, to borrow as little as possible because the interest on these unsubsidized loans will accumulate while you're in school.

As a third option, parents can take out PLUS loans, which are issued at a fixed rate of 8.25%.

Visit FAFSA.ed.gov to determine your eligibility for all these loan options.

One category of loans to avoid are private student loans. Back in 2005, the private student loan industry bought off enough politicians to gain the right to do any and all tactics short of causing you bodily harm in their efforts to collect on their money.

Private student loans typically can't even be dismissed in bankruptcy.

Finally, remember the consumer champ's rule of thumb when it comes to determining what level of borrowing you can comfortably handle: Do not take on loans that exceed the likely first-year earnings in your field.

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What others are saying

  • doesn't apply to a huge part of medical ed.
    In a field as commonplace and huge as becoming a physician or even a physician's assistant, the entry-level education costs well into 6 figures!!! Except for the wealthy and a few physician-shortage scholarships, no way to do it withoug private loans. No one i've heard of starts out in that field in 6 figures either.
    Strange that you don't mention that elephant in the classroom...
  • "Subsidized" Stafford loans
    My son has a couple of "subsidized" Stafford loans, yet his account shows acrued interest.

    I thought that " The interest is picked up by taxpayers while you're in school."

    Why is interest accruing on his account? I emailed Salli-Mae with no response.
  • Unsubsidized Student Loan
    Our daughter has been awarded the $3500, but it is unsubsidized. We will be paying the small amount of interest each month. We would ike to hear from someone who has had such a loan and their experience.
  • intelligence vs. education
    As a mother of 3 I have always told my sons that there is a difference between being "smart" and being "educated". Some of the most highly educated people I know routinely have their utilities turned off because they aren't "smart" enough to remember to pay them (or have them automatically deducted!)

    There IS value in education, as someone who has none can tell you. Try reading through job requirements...nearly everything requires a minimum of Bachelor's degree, and if you don't have one, you can expect to make much much less IF you can get hired at all!
  • Education vs. Learning vs. Schooled
    Buzz,
    I think we Americans are the most schooled box checkers around. Somewhere between the greatest generation and now we believe more in the alphabet after someones name or in their education resume than in the content of their demonstrated charcter to us. Maybe it is computers, maybe politics, maybe culture, but at some point we'll have to learn that a measure of a person's worth is not the sum of college degrees that person has attained.has.
  • pro education
    I've been working in the real world for about 25 years and I know education makes a difference in how much money you make and what kind of job you can get. I know some dummies will get degrees in useless fields and some will borrow too much money. I don't think there is such a thing as too much education. Never stop learning. Yes, there are those who are good at slinging bs and those who know so and so and seem to get good jobs, but from what I've seen, you can only get to a certain point unless you have that piece of paper from a university and without it, you are going to generally have to work much harder and earn less money.
  • Education
    I would like to see an unbiased study of how many college educated people never really recoup their college costs. Americans have to be the most over-educated people in the world. It seems we all want to be bankers and sit on our butts and noone seems to want to work with their hands. I can think of many youngsters today who attained advance degrees in lord-knows-what on borrowed money. Some have dismal futures and will virtually never recoup their education costs. However, all the studies I have seen on this all show that education pays for itself. And yet, it always seems that these studies are done by the educators themselves. Anyone know of an unbiased study?
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