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Showing posts with label Denpasar. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Denpasar. Show all posts

Saturday, September 24, 2011

Dinda, Cewek SMA Gatel Surabaya

Paying for College: Student Loans or Credit Cards?

Research conducted by student loan company Sallie Mae shows that in 2010, about 5 percent of college students paid an average of more than $2,000 in tuition and other educational expenses using a credit card to avoid taking out student loans. The same study showed that 6 percent of parents used credit cards to pay an average of nearly $5,000 in educational expenses for their college children.

Is using credit cards a smart way to avoid college loan debt? Financial advisors are in near-universal agreement that the answer is no, but that isn't stopping thousands of families from using credit cards in place of parent and student loans.

Some families might think that all debt is equal; others might think that they won't qualify for college loans. So what advantages exactly do education loans offer over credit cards?

1) Availability

Particularly in the last few years, as credit card companies have tightened their credit requirements in a retraction of the lax lending that led to the foreclosure crisis, credit cards have become harder to qualify for, available mostly only to consumers with strong credit. Many consumers with weaker credit have had their credit lines reduced or eliminated altogether.

Federal college loans, on the other hand, are available with minimal to no credit requirements. Government-funded Perkins loans and Stafford loans are issued to students in their own name without a credit check and with no income, employment, or co-signer required.

Federal parent loans, known as PLUS loans, have no income requirements and require only that you be free of major adverse credit items - a recent bankruptcy or foreclosure, defaulted federal education loans, and delinquencies of 90 days or more.

In other words, don't turn to credit cards simply because you think you won't qualify for school loans. Chances are, these days, you're more likely to qualify for a federal college loan than for a credit card.

2) Fixed Interest Rates

While most credit cards carry variable interest rates, federal student and parent loans are fixed-rate loans. With a fixed interest rate, you have the security of knowing that your student loan rate and monthly payments won't go up even when general interest rates do.

Many credit cards will also penalize you for late or missed payments by raising your interest rate. Federal school loans keep the same rate regardless of your payment history.

3) Deferred Repayment

Repayment on both federal student loans and federal parent loans can be postponed until six months after the student leaves school (nine months for Perkins undergraduate loans).

With credit cards, however, the bill is due right away, and the interest rate on a credit card balance is generally much higher than the interest rate charged on federal school loans.

If you're experiencing financial hardship, federal loans also offer additional payment deferment and forbearance options that can allow you to postpone making payments until you're back on your feet.

Even most private student loans - non-federal education loans offered by banks, credit unions, and other private lenders - offer you the option to defer making payments until after graduation.

Keep in mind, however, that even while your payments are deferred, the interest on these private student loans, as well as on federal parent loans and on unsubsidized federal student loans, will continue to accrue.

If the prospect makes you nervous of having deferred college loan debt that's slowly growing from accumulating interest charges, talk to your lender about in-school prepayment options that can allow you to pay off at least the interest each month on your school loans so your balances don't get any larger while you're still in school.

4) Income-Based Repayment Options

Once you do begin repaying your college loans, federal loans offer extended and income-based repayment options.

Extended repayment plans give you more time to repay, reducing the amount you have to pay each month. An income-based repayment plan scales down your monthly payments to a certain allowable percentage of your income so that your student loan payments aren't eating up more of your budget than you can live on.

Credit cards don't offer this kind of repayment flexibility, regardless of your employment, income, or financial situation. Your credit card will require a minimum monthly payment, and if you don't have the resources to pay it, your credit card company can begin collection activities to try to recover the money you owe them.

5) Tax Benefits

Any interest you pay on your parent or student loan debt may be tax-deductible. (You'll need to file a 1040A or 1040 instead of a 1040EZ in order to take the student loan interest deduction.)

In contrast, the interest on credit card purchases, even when a credit card is used for otherwise deductible educational expenses, can't be deducted.

To verify your eligibility for any tax benefits on your college loans, consult with a tax advisor or refer to Publication 970 of the IRS, "Tax Benefits for Education," available on the IRS website.



6) Student Loan Forgiveness Programs

Whereas the only way to escape your current credit card debt is to have it written off in a bankruptcy, several loan forgiveness programs exist that provide partial or total student loan debt relief for eligible borrowers.

Typically, these loan forgiveness programs will pay off some or all of your undergraduate and graduate school loan debt in exchange for a commitment from you to work for a certain number of years in a high-demand or underserved area.

The federal government sponsors the Public Loan Forgiveness Program, which will write off any remaining federal education loan debt you have after you've worked for 10 years in a public-service job.

Other federal, state, and private loan forgiveness programs will pay off federal and private student loans for a variety of professionals - veterinarians, nurses, rural doctors, and public attorneys, among others.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/5977288
lihat Nomer HP “Dinda, Cewek SMA Gatel Surabaya”

Friday, September 23, 2011

Ratu, Cewek SMA Manis Manado

Save Money By Consolidating Student Loans

Students who are facing a challenge to pay for their education find a good financial aid in the form of student loans. A majority of students have to leave their college with a huge debt burden quite unfortunately. Apart from this, most of these students have to write multiple checks for their loan repayment each month as they are often obtained through various lenders. Consolidation is certainly a good solution to their problem.

Loan consolidation - What is it actually?

Loan consolidation is about adding all your student loans into one so that you have a single repayment plan and a single lender. Home mortgage refinancing and student loan consolidation are quite similar to each other. During consolidation, your current balances are met while the total balance rolls over to the consolidated loan. Thus, all you need to deal now is just a single student loan. Besides students their parents may also get their loans consolidated.

Can I consolidate my loans?

You should meet the following criteria:

You must fall within the 6-months grace period after your graduation, or you need to have started with your loan repayment.
The total balance of your loans that meet the criteria should be over $7,500.
You should have 2 or more lenders.
Your student loans have not yet been consolidated, or when you have returned to school and acquired fresh loans since your consolidation.



The following types of loans can be consolidated:

Federal Perkins
National Direct Student
Unsubsidized and Direct Subsidized
Unsubsidized Federal Stafford and Federal Subsidized
Direct PLUS and Federal PLUS
Federal Consolidation and Direct Consolidation
And many more.

Where can I get a consolidation loan?

You may get your loans consolidated through the U.S. Department of Education or a credit union participating in the Federal Family Education Loan Program or through a bank. Irrespective of where you get your loans consolidated, the terms and conditions usually remain same. Make sure you get in touch with the lenders who currently hold your loans regarding this.

If you have all loans through a single lender, you should get them consolidated with him.

While deciding about consolidating, make sure that you choose to do it only when you aren't going back to school and applying for fresh loans. In this way you might try to be sure that you'll achieve the best deal out of consolidation. The rate of interest doesn't usually vary between lenders, but you might achieve discounted rates through some of them for prompt repayments. Some of them will even offer discounts for obtaining the right to debit your account for monthly payments.

Your student loans may be consolidated any time during the grace period of 6 months or once you begin with your loan repayment. You may achieve a lower rate of interest if your loans get consolidated within the grace period. However, it is a better idea for you to wait till you reach the fifth month of your grace period and then consolidate your loans. This way, you won't lose the remaining grace period. It takes about 30-45 days for the entire consolidation process to get completed.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/6522827
lihat Nomer HP “Ratu, Cewek SMA Manis Manado”


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