Consequences of Biden’s plan to cancel student loan debt, according to experts: ‘Enormous consequences’
Categories: US Education News
President Joe Biden’s plan to cancel student loan debt could lead to higher inflation and perceived inequality, several experts warned.Biden said in a press conference late last month he is considering canceling "some" student loan debt."I am not considering $50,000 debt reduction, but I am in the process of taking a hard look at whether or not there will be additional debt forgiveness," Biden said.Former Congressional Budget Office Director Douglas Holtz-Eaken said canceling student loan debt would do nothing to slow rising inflation in the United States.Economist Nicholas Eberstadt told Fox News Digital at the Milken Institute 2022 Global Conference that a "magical, universal debt relief" would actually harm those it is intended to help. "We know already that would be a tremendously regressive transfer towards the well-off," he said.Current director of the Congressional Budget Office Phillip Swagel conceded the current pause in student loan repayments has provided financial benefits for millions of people, but it has also "created uncertainty.""Will these payments resume? As the job market rebounded, there’s millions of people who have gained jobs, and yet are still not paying their loans," he said. This action has created a gulf between those who paid their student loans, those who did not take out student loans for college, and those who did not go to college, Swagel said. "These sort of apparent horizontal inequities is probably an unintended consequence," he added. "Different people are being treated differently in ways that might be difficult to explain."During his presidential campaign, Biden supported erasing $10,000 in student debt for most borrowers, but has raised questions about his legal authority to do so via executive order. During a press briefing last week, press secretary Jen Psaki said an income cap for student loan forgiveness was under consideration.Biden has extended the freeze on student loan payments through Aug. 31, citing the COVID-19 pandemic.