U.S. student loan forgiveness has borrowers hoping for vacations,
medical school
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[August 25, 2022]
By Kanishka Singh
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Americans bearing
heavy college debt loads welcomed U.S. President Joe Biden's
announcement on Wednesday that he would forgive $10,000 in student
loans, and some shared hopes they can jettison extra work hours and
perhaps take a vacation or return to school.
"I would not have second thoughts when planning a trip or going on a
vacation," said John Paul, 49, a restaurant manager in Washington DC who
said he took out loans for his son's tuition. "Earlier, it would be at
the back of our mind that we have this debt hanging over us. Now we are
somewhat relieved."
He was interviewed shortly after the Biden administration announced it
would extend a COVID-19 pandemic-linked pause on student loan repayment
to the end of the year, while forgiving $10,000 in student debt for
borrowers whose income falls below $125,000 a year, or $250,000 for a
married couple.
Paul said the relief will cut his outstanding amount of debt in half.
Vincent Joseph, who graduated in 2019 and currently works at a lobbying
firm in Washington, said he was happy to hear his remaining $6,500 of
debt was likely to be relieved.
"There could be an entire next generation that does not have to work
extra hours or additional jobs to repay this debt," he said, noting he
had taken on a job in college to pay off his loans.
"Many people work extra jobs and as a result compromise on spending time
with friends and family because they are worried about their debt," he
said, calling it a small step in the right direction.
Millennials, or those born between 1982 and 2000, "have significantly
more student debt, lower levels of homeownership, and less net worth
than previous generations," according to research published before the
COVID-19 pandemic by the non-partisan Government Accountability Office.
Alexis Horton, 20, a biology major at Howard University, said the
announcement is a relief for those who plan further studies.
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A graduate holds their mortarboard cap
after a commencement ceremony at the University of Southern
California (USC) in Los Angeles, California, U.S., May 12, 2017.
REUTERS/Patrick T. Fallon
"As a biology student who wants to go to med school, I do rack up a
lot of loans at school, so hearing that I could possibly get $20,000
or $10,000 (off) does sound really good," Horton told Reuters.
Advocates of student debt relief welcomed the step but also urged
the Biden administration to do more to deal with systemic problems.
Kyra Taylor, an attorney with the National Consumer Law Center who
focuses on student loans, described the step as "life changing for
millions of Americans."
The White House estimates its debt relief plan could lead to about
20 million borrowers having their debt completely canceled. About 43
million Americans have federal student loan debt, according to
educationdata.org.
Taylor, however, added that the plan does not do enough to help
borrowers with larger balances, like many Black Americans, who
experts say face heavy debt burdens.
"The administration should take additional actions to address racial
inequities that the student loan system has exacerbated, and that
means Black Americans, and especially Black women, are burdened by
more student loan debt just to access the same opportunities as
others," she told Reuters.
The government said it is also forgiving up to $20,000 in debt for
recipients of federal Pell Grants, some 6 million students from
low-income families, and is proposing a new rule that protects some
income from repayment plans and forgives some loan balances after 10
years of repayment.
(Reporting and writing by Kanishka Singh in Washington; additional
reporting by Julio-Cesar Chavez and Matt Mcknight; editing by
Heather Timmons and David Gregorio)
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