Posted on 09/26/2009 9:25:50 AM PDT by Halfmanhalfamazing
Read what happened when a different Public Option was voted in...
The Other Public Option Comments from Congressman Scott Garrett
The Other Public Option September 24, 2009
In 1993, Congressional Democrats worked with newly sworn-in President Bill Clinton to create the William D. Ford Federal Direct Loan Program, a student loan public option meant to compete with private student loan issuers. We are not taking a free enterprise system and federalizing it, then-Deputy Education Secretary Madeleine Kunin said. We are improving the entrepreneurial and competitive possibilities. Sound familiar?
Fast forward sixteen years and the new Congressional majority is again working with a newly installed President on a public option, this time a public option for health care insurance. President Obamas chief ally in the Senate, Dick Durbin, said on Meet The Press last Sunday that this public option is a way to make sure there's competition for these private health insurance companies. The President himself has said that the public option will force the insurance companies to compete and keep them honest.
The student loan public option should serve as a cautionary and instructional tale for Congress and the American people as we continue to discuss ways to reform the health care system. Right now, over 80% of student loans issues are federally guaranteed about two-thirds of those are issued through private lenders, while the remaining third are secured directly through the public option. Though both public lenders and federally guaranteed private lenders offer relatively similar interest rates and payment plans, more than twice as many students and parents choose private options because of universities preference and superior customer service.
On Thursday, the House passed a bill (H.R. 3221) that will, if signed into law, eliminate private loans with federal guarantees, replacing such loans entirely with the governments Direct Loan program in other words, removing the optionality of the public option at a cost of $1 trillion over the next ten years. In addition to crowding private capital out of the industry, this bill gives the public student loan programs advantages the private sector will be unable to match. For example, the bill gives federal loans a variable interest rate when rates are on the decline and a cap when rates go back up. The plan also locks in low fixed-interest rates on certain loans. Once the Federal Reserves spending spree results in unavoidable inflation, the Treasury will likely be paying to lend this money. All of these provisions lead to an unsustainable plan described by the Wall Street Journal as a kind of heads-borrowers-win, tails-taxpayers-lose offer [that] will be difficult for a private company to match.
Since 1965, private loans carrying a federal guarantee have been the most common means of borrowing to finance a college education. It took less than two decades for the public option to crowd out private student loan providers, leaving students, parents, and universities with an option that they have rejected by a two-to-one margin.
The idea that government can compete with private health insurance while setting its own rules for competition and remain optional defies both history and basic economic principles. I support real health care reform that is portable, affordable, sustainable, effective, and innovative. Please feel free to share your thoughts on this issue with my office at 202-225-4465.
Sincerely,
Scott Garrett Member of Congress
Florida knows about this too with it's public option; citizens insurance . What was once the insurer of last resort is now the biggest in the state.
Right off the bat that is a bad idea. Right off the bat you have a 'heads I win, tails you lose' system in favor of private banks: if students pay off the loans the bank makes money off the interest. If the students don't pay off the loans, then the feds come in to make the banks whole.
But I suppose it is OK if 'private' companies like banks lobby the government to get special treatment.
All that government loan programs have done ... of any kind ... is to add to the inflation of college education. If most students had to pay cash for their education then the colleges would have to keep their prices reasonable.
With all the student loan money sloshing around backed by taxpayers like you and me, the colleges can jack up prices at rates much higher than inflation and get away with it.
We may as well just turn over all colleges to the government, and turn all professors into public employees. That's what they seem to want anyway.
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