Loans-Untangling the Mess

Headlines triumph the Bipartisan Student Loan Certainty Act as an act of bipartisanship but leave out important details such as what the actual rates will be, who will be impacted and when the rates come into effect. President Obama is expected to sign the Act into law shortly. As compromises go, this is not a bad deal but is certainly not one to shout about from the rooftops. If you already have loans from previous years, your rate stays the same.

For those of you taking out a graduate Stafford and/or Grad PLUS loans this year, congratulations, Congress has reduced your rates. The rate applies retroactively from 1 July, 2013, so even if you have already requested loans for the fall, you will pay the lower rate.

Years                   2012       2013

Stafford (grad)  6.8%      5.4%

Grad PLUS           7.9%      6.4%

Each year, a new rate for that year’s loans will be calculated by adding the Treasury’s 10 year borrowing rate (2013 rate is 1.8%) to 3.6% for Stafford graduate loans and 4.6% for Grad PLUS loans. There are caps to limit how high the interest rate will go. 9.5% for Stafford loans and 10.5% for Grad PLUS loans. However, the Congressional Budget Office does not expect loans to reach that cap within the next decade.

For folks who already have loans, your rate stays the same. I am unhappy about this since I had hoped to save some dough on interest but alas, it was not to be. There is nothing you can do to lower your rate while in school except for paying down the interest. While your loans are deferred, which from the time you take them out in August until you graduate, interest builds up on the principle (amount you took out). It will also build during your grace period after graduation and at the end of the grace period, it will compound into your principle. If you can afford it, paying down some interest will save you some money and reduce the time you have to repay (about 14 months in my case if I pay off the entire amount, about 7k). If you are not a dependent, you can deduct up $2,500 from your taxes.

Fortunately, some of the dumber proposals were ignored such as allowing the rate to fluctuate up or down every year for all loans. Compromise also ignored some of the smarter proposals such lending to students using the same 0.75% rate that AIG and other bailed out banks received. To my knowledge, no one talked about letting students refinance their existing loans at lower rates which is unfortunate because that would save all borrowers a nice chunk of change.

For further questions, graduate students have Cynthia Roach in the Financial Aid office. She is very helpful and you can contact her here.

Interning in Kenya

MAIR students must complete a summer internship as a degree requirement. There are a variety of school-run programs or you can venture out on your own. I chose the latter and through a Maxwell alumni, was hired as an intern at DIAL Africa, a small Kenya-based NGO which works in Somalia.

A key hiring requirement for my job was research and I started doing research on security sector reform (SSR) in Somalia with an eye towards future business for DIAL Africa. SSR has traditionally focused on improving local and national police through training and equipment purchases. I concluded that DIAL Africa should eschew trying to involved in a traditional program and instead create a rule of law program which incorporated laws that Somalis actually use such as xeer and sharia.

At the moment, I am helping create a new strategic plan for DIAL Africa. The idea came out of some issues a colleague showed me and with another Maxwell intern and most of the other local staff, we have created a new organizational plan. It is not something I expected to be doing but I love the fact that the local staff are highly involved. Without their cooperation and input, there is very little I could accomplish. A key area I am developing is risk management and crisis response plans. DIAL Africa works in one of the most volatile regions in the world and minimizing risk to both staff and beneficiaries of projects is an important towards future growth. My crisis management class with Bruce Dayton made my contribution in this area possible.

Yesterday, I was in a meeting at the UN Somalia complex in Nairobi and immediately saw how a more effective crisis response could make a difference. In some of the areas where DIAL Africa has projects, cases of polio have been reported. There have been 88 cases this year so far and 16 in the last two weeks. Fecal-oral transmission  is how the polio virus has spread so quickly in Somalia and the Water, Sanitation and Hygiene Cluster (WASH), a group of NGO’s working on the same issue, was called together to try to coordinate a response. With the help of local staff, my plan will help prepare DIAL Africa not just to protect its personnel but allow a rapid response towards assisting communities with reported polio cases, whether it would be testing for the virus, diagnosing the disease, vaccinations or providing WASH materials and training. Simply vaccinating people is not the only answer because there are children who have received the vaccine 10 or 12 times but get the virus because of deplorable sanitary conditions. This is the hope but Somalia is a difficult place to make things work. As recently as 2007, Somalia was polio free. The Guardian has pictures of the vaccination campaign.

I will be home in exactly three weeks and I hope to have a substantial portion of my plans complete before I leave.

Interested in learning more about Kenya, check out my personal blog, http://zackinkenya.blogspot.com

DIAL Africa’s website will soon be re-launched thanks to my intern colleague. http://dialafrica.org/

Kenya on my mind, next stop Nairobi!

As I wrote in Summertime two months ago, Maxwell MAIR students are required to do an internship abroad or career-related in the U.S. It is amazing the difference two months makes in terms of what internships are possible. Application after application resulted in rejection after rejection until finally a break. Finally, I narrowed my selection to a handful of internship options, including one in Zambia and one in Kenya. Bush life in Zambia turned out to be $100 per day so my decision was not so difficult after all. I will work at  Development Initiative Access Link (DIAL), Africa, a Kenya based NGO from June through August. This will be my first work experience abroad and there is even a possibility I may get to see some development work in the field.

I am extremely excited! While Kenya is at the top of the “development darlings” list, it is a fascinating, developing democracy. Just last week was President Uhuru Kenyatta’s inauguration which came after a largely peaceful election (never mind his ICC indictment). I even booked a wicked cheap flight with a nine hour layover in Amsterdam, my favorite (and thus-far only) layover city.

I will be exceedingly busy over the next few weeks, wrapping up my semester, diving into my MAIR capstone as well as a one week African Development Seminar course in Washington, D.C. Do not expect to hear much from me until June!

Note this was cross-posted on Zack In Kenya.

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