Biden forgives millions of student loans; critics fear inflation
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[August 25, 2022]
By Nandita Bose and Alexandra Alper
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -President Joe Biden
said on Wednesday the U.S. government will forgive $10,000 in student
loans for millions of debt-saddled former college students, keeping a
pledge he made in the 2020 campaign for the White House.
The move could boost support for his fellow Democrats in the November
congressional elections, but some economists said it may fuel inflation
and some Republicans in the U.S. Congress questioned whether the
president had the legal authority to cancel the debt.
Debt forgiveness will free up hundreds of billions of dollars for new
consumer spending that could be aimed at homebuying and other big-ticket
expenses, according to economists who said this would add a new wrinkle
to the country's inflation fight.
The actions are "for families that need them the most - working and
middle class people hit especially hard during the pandemic," Biden said
during remarks at the White House. He pledged no high-income households
would benefit, addressing a central criticism of the plan.
"I will never apologize for helping working Americans and middle class,
especially not to the same folks who voted for a $2 trillion tax cut
that mainly benefited the wealthiest Americans and the biggest
corporations," Biden said, referring to a Republican tax cut passed
under former President Donald Trump.
Borrower balances have been frozen since the beginning of the COVID-19
outbreak, with no payments required on most federal student loans since
March 2020. Many Democrats had pushed for Biden to forgive as much as
$50,000 per borrower.
Republicans mostly opposed student loan forgiveness, calling it unfair
because it will disproportionately help people earning higher incomes.
"President Biden's student loan socialism is a slap in the face to every
family who sacrificed to save for college, every graduate who paid their
debt, and every American who chose a certain career path or volunteered
to serve in our Armed Forces in order to avoid taking on debt," Senate
Minority Leader Mitch McConnell said Wednesday.
The administration has yet to determine the price tag for the package,
which will depend on how many people apply for it, White House domestic
policy adviser Susan Rice told reporters. Student loans obtained after
June 30 this year are not eligible, she said.
White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre told reporters the
administration has legal authority to forgive the debt under a law
allowing such action during a national emergency such as a pandemic.
Earlier, Republican U.S. Representative Elise Stefanik had called the
plan "reckless and illegal."
American university tuition fees are substantially higher than in most
other rich countries, and U.S. consumers carry $1.75 trillion in student
loan debt, most of it held by the federal government. Biden said other
countries could bypass the United States economically if students are
not offered economic relief.
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U.S. President Joe Biden greets people
on South Lawn after arriving on Marine One from a trip to Delaware
at the White House in Washington, U.S., August 24, 2022.
REUTERS/Leah Millis
PANDEMIC PAUSE, PELL GRANTS
The administration will extend a COVID-19 pandemic-linked pause on
student loan repayment to year end, while forgiving $10,000 in
student debt for single borrowers with annual income under $125,000
a year or married couples who earn less than $250,000, the White
House said.
Some 8 million borrowers will be affected automatically, the
Department of Education said; others need to apply for forgiveness.
The government is also forgiving up to $20,000 in debt for some 6
million students from low-income families who received federal Pell
Grants, and proposing a new rule that protects some income from
repayment plans and forgives some loan balances after 10 years of
repayment, the Education Department said.
A New York Federal Reserve study shows that cutting $10,000 in
federal debt for every student would amount to $321 billion and
eliminate the entire balance for 11.8 million borrowers, or 31% of
them.
INFLATION IMPACT
A senior Biden administration official told reporters the plan could
benefit up to 43 million student borrowers, completely canceling the
debt for some 20 million.
After Dec. 31, the government will resume requiring payment on
remaining student loans that were paused during the pandemic. The
official said this would offset any inflationary effects of the
forgiveness. Payment resumptions could even have a dampening effect
on prices, the official said.
Former U.S. Treasury secretary Larry Summers disagreed. He said on
Twitter that debt relief "consumes resources that could be better
used helping those who did not, for whatever reason, have the chance
to attend college. It will also tend to be inflationary by raising
tuitions."
Similarly Jason Furman, a Harvard professor who headed the Council
of Economic Advisers during the Obama administration, said
debt-cancellation would nullify the deflationary powers of the
Inflation Reduction Act. "Pouring roughly half trillion dollars of
gasoline on the inflationary fire that is already burning is
reckless," he said.
Moody's analytics chief economist Mark Zandi sided with the White
House, saying the resumption of billions of dollars per month in
student loan payments "will restrain growth and is disinflationary."
(Reporting by Nandita Bose in Rehoboth Beach, Delaware, Alexandra
Alper and Dave Lawder in Washington and Moira Warburton in
Vancouver; editing by Jonathan Oatis, Heather Timmons and David
Gregorio)
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