What Low Interest Rates Mean for Young Spenders and Savers

Here's how today's rock-bottom rates will affect your student loans, home-buying potential, credit cards and savings.

Interest rates these days could star in their own Flo Rida video: They hit the floor and next thing you know, they got low, low, low, low, low, low, low, low. With rates at already-record lows, the Federal Reserve promised in early August to hold short-term rates (to which credit card rates are tied) near zero at least through mid 2013. Then it enacted "Operation Twist" in late September -- a plan to lower long-term rates (which affect mortgage rates) by exchanging $400 billion worth of short-term debt for longer-term Treasuries.

How might crazy low rates affect you? Here are the answers to some questions you might have:

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Stacy Rapacon
Online Editor, Kiplinger.com

Rapacon joined Kiplinger in October 2007 as a reporter with Kiplinger's Personal Finance magazine and became an online editor for Kiplinger.com in June 2010. She previously served as editor of the "Starting Out" column, focusing on personal finance advice for people in their twenties and thirties.

Before joining Kiplinger, Rapacon worked as a senior research associate at b2b publishing house Judy Diamond Associates. She holds a B.A. degree in English from the George Washington University.