1 | FILE - In this Thursday, Aug. 6, 2015, file photo, Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Rodham Clinton listens to a home care worker during a roundtable discussion in Los Angeles. |
2 | Calling for a "new college compact," Hillary Rodham Clinton on Monday, Aug. 10, will unveil a $350 billion plan aimed at making college more affordable and reducing the crushing burden of student debt. |
3 | Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Rodham Clinton arrives at the high school in Exeter, N.H., Monday, Aug. 10, 2015, where she announced her college affordability plan. |
4 | Calling for a "new college compact," Hillary Rodham Clinton on Monday unveiled a $350 billion plan aimed at making college more affordable and reducing the crushing burden of student debt. |
5 | At a town hall meeting in New Hampshire, the state with the highest average student debt in the country, Clinton proposed steps to reduce the cost of four-year public schools, make two-year community colleges tuition-free and cut student loan interest rates, according to campaign aides. |
6 | She pitched her plan as a public-private partnership, requiring a contribution from the federal government and states, the colleges and universities and students themselves. |
7 | "Americans will have to work hard to put themselves through school to out-learn and out-hustle our competitors, just like we always have," she told voters gathered at a high school in Exeter, New Hampshire. |
8 | The college affordability plan, a main plank of her policy platform, is an effort to address a major financial stress for many American families and satisfy a central demand of the Democratic party's liberal wing. |
9 | The proposal centers on a $200 billion federal incentive system aimed at encouraging states to expand their investments in higher education and cut student costs. |
10 | States that guarantee "no-loan" tuition at four-year public schools and free tuition at community colleges will be eligible to receive federal funds. |
11 | But Clinton doesn't go quite as far as some of her primary challengers. |
12 | In May, Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders released his own plan that would eliminate tuition and fees for public universities. |
13 | The $70 billion annual proposal would be funded by imposing a tax on transactions by hedge funds, investment houses and other Wall Street firms. |
14 | Former Maryland Gov. Martin O'Malley has proposed giving all students access to debt-free college at in-state universities within five years. |
15 | Although she didn't mention her rivals by name, Clinton said simply asking the federal government to pay for tuition is not an appropriate way to lower the burden on students. |
16 | "We can't expect the federal government just to pay the bill for free, that's not how America works," she said. |
17 | While military veterans, lower-income students and those who complete a national service program, like AmeriCorps, would go to school for free in the Clinton plan, others would incur costs for their schooling and living expenses at four-year public universities. |
18 | "For many students, it would translate into debt-free tuition," said Carmel Martin, executive vice president for policy at the Center for American Progress, who advised Clinton on that plan. |
19 | "It will depend on the student circumstances and the institution they are going to." |
20 | For most students, their families will still be expected to make a "realistic" contribution, say Clinton's aides, and students will contribute wages from ten hours of work per week. |
21 | Those currently repaying loans would be able to refinance their outstanding debt at lower rates, a change Clinton's aides say will save an average of $2,000 for 25 million borrowers over the life of the loan - an amount equal to just about $17 per month over a 10-year repayment period. |
22 | She would also expand income-based repayment programs, allowing every student borrower to enroll in a plan that would cap their payments at 10 percent of their income with remaining debt forgiven after 20 years. |
23 | The cost of Clinton's plan would be offset by capping itemized tax deductions for wealthy families at 28 percent, like those taken by high-income taxpayers for charitable contributions and mortgage interest. |
24 | That proposal, which has long been included in President Barack Obama's annual budget, would raise more than $600 billion in the next decade, according to the Treasury Department. |
25 | Clinton's plan would likely face a steep climb in Congress: A $60 billion Obama administration initiative for free community college has gotten little traction. |
26 | Republican presidential candidates criticized the costs of Clinton's proposal on Monday morning. |
27 | "Every time you add more money and financial aid, (traditional colleges) raise their tuition rates," Florida Sen. Marco Rubio said in an interview on Fox News. |
28 | "That's what's going to happen here again unless they have competition." |
29 | Former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush released a statement saying the proposal would "raise the cost of college even further and shift the burden to hardworking taxpayers." |
30 | College affordability has emerged as a major issue on the presidential campaign trail, as families face the highest debt burden in generations. |
31 | National student debt is near $1.3 trillion dollars and the average price for in-state students at public four-year universities is 42 percent higher than it was a decade ago, according to the College Board. |
32 | Clinton aides believe their plan will help build enthusiasm for her candidacy with younger voters - whose support twice helped catapult Obama into the White House. |
33 | The policy roll-out is timed for when students return to college campuses. |
34 | Clinton organizers plan to promote the plan at registration events and other gatherings kicking off the school year, according to a campaign aide, in an effort to galvanize college students. |
35 | Adam Green, co-founder of the Progressive Change Campaign Committee, which has advocated to elevate college affordability to a top political issue, praised Clinton's "bold proposal." |
36 | "It represents a sea change in this conversation in just a year or so," he said. |