Los Angeles Times

Biden announces more student debt relief

Latest step will help 125,000 borrowers by forgiving $9 billion owed through existing assistance programs.

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WASHINGTON — President Biden announced another round of federal student loan forgivenes­s on Wednesday as borrowers brace for payments to restart after a three-year pause that began during the COVID-19 pandemic.

The Democratic president’s latest step will help 125,000 borrowers by erasing $9 billion in debt through existing relief programs. In total, 3.6 million borrowers will have had $127 billion in debt wiped out since Biden took office.

“President Biden has long believed that college should be a ticket to the middle class, not a burden that weighs on families,” the White House said in a statement.

Biden promised to help alleviate the burden of student debt while running for president, and he’s been under pressure to follow through even though his original plan was overturned by the conservati­ve majority on the Supreme Court.

The president has been relying on a patchwork of different programs to chip away at debt, such as public service loan forgivenes­s and the SAVE plan — Saving on a Valuable Education — which lowers payments by tying them to borrowers’ income.

“For years, millions of eligible borrowers were unable to access the student debt relief they qualified for, but that’s all changed thanks to President Biden and this administra­tion’s relentless efforts to fix the broken student loan system,” Education Secretary Miguel Cardona said in a statement.

Additional debt forgivenes­s could help alleviate the impact of the longschedu­led resumption of loan payments this month, which will put a dent in tens of millions of family budgets. The payment resumption is unlikely to undermine the economy’s strength in the long term even though analysts at BNP Paribas estimated it could take $100 billion out of consumers’ pockets and slow overall growth during the final three months of this year.

Republican­s have fought Biden’s plans on student debt, but Wednesday’s announceme­nt comes as they’re consumed by infighting on Capitol Hill. Hard-right Republican­s forced a vote that ousted Rep. Kevin McCarthy (RBakersfie­ld) as House speaker, leaving the chamber in chaos.

In addition, the NAACP is pushing Biden to expand debt forgivenes­s by allowing Parent PLUS loans, which parents use for their children’s college education, to be eligible for the SAVE plan.

“Historical­ly, education has been viewed as an entry point for marginaliz­ed communitie­s to achieve upward mobility and begin building generation­al wealth,” NAACP President Derrick Johnson said in a statement that emphasized the disproport­ionate impact of debt on Black families.

“It is unconscion­able that, in their quest to provide their children with a brighter future, Black parents have fallen victim to a system that preys on their inherent disadvanta­ge,” Johnson said.

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