Los Angeles Times

Who would get student debt relief?

Biden unveils latest, narrower plans to help 30 million borrowers. Here’s a look at their main features.

- By Jon Healey

After months of hearings and negotiatio­ns, the Biden administra­tion this week announced its latest plans for student debt relief, proposing changes that would save about 30 million borrowers billions of dollars in total.

The plans aren’t as sweeping as the across-theboard loan forgivenes­s of up to $20,000 per borrower that President Biden ordered in 2022, a measure the Supreme Court threw out last year. But they go further than what the administra­tion proposed in the wake of the justices’ ruling, offering to cancel all or part of the debt for borrowers for whom the loans pose a hardship.

The hardship proposal emerged in February after a strong push from advocates of student-loan borrowers, said Natalia Abrams, president and founder of the Student Debt Crisis Center.

At this point, the administra­tion’s plans are just that — the Education Department is expected to propose the rules in the coming months, followed by a public comment period — before it can put them into effect. That’s when the legal challenges will probably begin, Abrams said, noting that the administra­tion’s major efforts to ease student-loan debt have been challenged by conservati­ves.

That includes Biden’s Saving on a Valuable Education plan, which slashes the long-term cost of federal student loans for borrowers of limited means. Eleven Republican state attorneys general sued to block the plan in March, saying the administra­tion did not have the legal authority to offer it.

On Monday the administra­tion released an outline of its plans. The main features are:

8 Debt cancellati­on for borrowers who’d been repaying their undergradu­ate loans for at least 20 years, or their graduate school loans for at least 25 years.

8 Balance reductions for about 25 million borrowers whose debt grew because of unpaid interest. The plan would wipe out up to $20,000 in interest-related debt for all borrowers. Those who enrolled in income-driven repayment plans and saw their debt grow even if they made their required monthly payments would have all interest-related debt canceled automatica­lly.

8 Debt cancellati­on for borrowers eligible for loan forgivenes­s but who had not applied. This group includes people enrolled in certain income-driven repayment plans and the Public Service Loan Forgivenes­s program.

8 Debt cancellati­on for students at schools or programs that were declared ineligible for federal student aid programs because they “cheated or took advantage of students,” the Education Department said. Debt relief would also be available for students at schools or programs that closed and “failed to provide sufficient value — for example, that leave graduates with unaffordab­le loan payments or earnings no better than what someone with a high school diploma earns.” The outline released Monday offered no details on how eligibilit­y would be determined.

8 Partial or full debt cancellati­on for borrowers experienci­ng hardship in repaying their loans. A preliminar­y version of this proposal said it would apply not just to recipients of loans made directly by the federal government, but also to all Federal Family Education Loan recipients, including parents who took out Federal PLUS Loans through private lenders.

The rationale behind most of these proposals is that student loan programs were poorly managed and administer­ed, causing borrowers to amass far more debt than they should have. For example, the Education Department argues that many borrowers who were having trouble making payments were steered into forbearanc­e, which increased their debt, rather than income-based plans that could ultimately reduce their burden.

“Many of these people, these borrowers, did pay [back] what they borrowed,” Abrams said. “What they’re dealing with is compound capitalize­d interest” — additional debt beyond the initial loans caused when unpaid interest is folded back into the loan balance. Essentiall­y, borrowers pay interest on the interest. That happened even to borrowers enrolled in programs that tied their payments to their income, when monthly payments were not large enough to cover their interest charges.

Once people understand how often these loan programs made matters worse for borrowers, Abrams said, they at least agree that the extra interest burdens should be wiped out. That’s what the administra­tion’s new rule would do.

The Committee for a Responsibl­e Federal Budget, which advocates for lower federal borrowing, blasted the plans in a statement Monday.

“The President’s previous student loan cancellati­on plan was expensive, inflationa­ry, poorly targeted, and would have boosted rather than reduced tuitions,” said Maya MacGuineas, the group’s president. “This plan similarly misses the mark ....

“The President has already spent more than $600 billion on debt cancellati­on — which is as much as the federal government is slated to spend on K-12 education for the next decade and more than double the cost of his budget’s proposal to offer free community college, expand Pell Grants, and increase other higher education funding. The White House should turn its attention to working with Congress to actually pass structural reforms that get to the root of the problem and are fully paid for.”

Abrams said advocates for borrowers “wanted full and complete debt cancellati­on,” which the new plan would not deliver. Neverthele­ss, she said, “this is another huge step in the right direction.”

She added: “What [Biden] is doing is, he’s fixing the broken system.” That includes steps such as the SAVE plan, she said, in which the government covers unpaid interest for borrowers who remain current so their loan balances do not grow.

The latest plans came after the Education Department sought to reach a consensus among borrowers, loan servicers and others involved in student loans on an approach to debt relief based on the Higher Education Act. Abrams said she believed the negotiator­s did reach consensus, but that didn’t bridge the political divide over loan forgivenes­s.

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