Biden is considering forgiving $10,000 in student debt per borrower, and recent reporting shows that debt relief will likely be capped at individuals making under $125,000 a year and families making under $250,000 a year. An April Harvard poll found that nine in 10 voters under the age of 30 supported some form of debt cancellation, with 38 percent in favor of Biden canceling all student loan debt. The same poll found that Biden’s popularity among young Americans has dropped 18 points since last spring.
Many borrowers graduated during the student loan payment pause and have yet to make a single payment on their student loans. Jamie Turner, communications manager for the Association of Young Americans, said that many borrowers are “just really scared about what’s to come,” without a final word from Biden on whether forgiveness is coming.
If the lift of the pause on federal student loan payments was followed by debt relief, some say that this could help Biden. “Politically, it would be challenging for any president to restart loan repayment. It might take that sort of political carrot in order to get things turned back on,” said Beth Akers, a senior fellow at the right-leaning think tank the American Enterprise Institute.
A move on debt relief could also help the president gain some edge among Black voters, who are disproportionately burdened by student debt. Black college graduates hold an average of $25,000 more in student loan debt than white college graduates and are more likely to struggle with student loan payments and take longer than white borrowers to pay off their debt.
Some supporters of student debt relief have argued that an income cap would prevent high-income borrowers from receiving a handout by having their debts relieved. However, an analysis from Policies for Action found that Black borrowers would be the most impacted by an income cap on debt relief, because the highest-earning Black borrowers have more student loan debt than white borrowers at the same income level. Research has also shown that canceling $10,000 in student debt would not be enough to address how student debt contributes to the racial wealth gap.
A 2021 study found that canceling up to $50,000 in student debt would increase Black borrowers’ wealth by 33 percent. Progressive Democrats like Senator Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts and civil rights organizations like the NAACP have called for the president to cancel $50,000 in student debt per borrower without a cap on income. “So we should be focused on policies that appeal to Black voters, and student loan debt forgiveness is an easy one to implement, relatively, and would have far-reaching financial impacts for Black families,” said Reece of UT Austin.
“If Biden is interested in winning Black people back over, this is a good way to start.” Some Voters Are Concerned About Debt Relief’s Impacts on Inflation On the other hand, Republicans have opposed any form of student debt cancellation from the Biden administration, and lawmakers in Congress have sounded alarms, claiming that Biden does not have the authority to cancel student loans via executive order and that it could possibly increase inflation.
“The ramifications of such a policy for taxpayers, students, and our society cannot be overstated. Blanket student loan forgiveness will lead to more inflation-filled deficit spending and the removal of any incentive for schools and students to practice financial responsibility,” said Representative Virginia Foxx in an opinion piece for Fox News in which she called Biden’s plans to cancel student debt a “scam.”
A recent blog post from the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget argues that canceling student loan debt would undermine the disinflationary effects of the Inflation Reduction Act. It claims that canceling $10,000 of student debt per borrower for all households making under $300,000 a year would cost the federal government $230 billion.
However, some are skeptical of the report. For example, the left-leaning think tank the Roosevelt Institute responded to this blog post with its own analysis and said that debt relief does not work like a stimulus policy, meaning it does not contribute to federal spending by giving people money.
“It is not leading to any additional spending; instead, it’s actually increasing wealth, because when you have any kind of debt, and you clear that debt, it doesn’t mean you are giving people more money—it means that you’re clearing their balance sheets so that they don’t have to continue to live under the burden of that,” said Alí Bustamante, deputy director of the worker power and economic security program at the Roosevelt Institute and author of the analysis. Bustamante said research shows that minimizing debt, especially for low-income families, encourages saving, and not spending, and therefore does not have a stimulating effect on the economy.
A June New York Times article reported that Biden has been torn between using debt relief as a tool to address racial and economic inequalities and concerns about debt relief’s possible impacts on inflation. Jared Bernstein, a member of the White House Council of Economic Advisors, told the Times that if debt relief happened at the same time as repayment began, its effects on inflation could be neutral. Despite its interconnectivity to other hot-topic economic issues moving into the midterms, debt relief is unlikely to be a make-or-break issue for most.
“Are there single-issue voters that are focused on student loan forgiveness where a student loan policy that doesn’t go their way is literally going to force them to either not vote or change their affiliation for some reason?” questioned Carlo Salerno, vice president of research at CampusLogic. “I am sure that there are not a lot of people who feel like the hill they’re going to die on when it comes to their political preferences is student loan forgiveness.”
Meghan Brink
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