The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

CBO: White House plan to cancel student loan debt costs $400B

- By Jeff Stein and Danielle Douglas-Gabriel

“CBO’s $400 billion cost estimate shows this administra­tion has lost all sense of fiscal responsibi­lity. Rather than working with Congress to bring down college costs, President Biden has opted to bury the American people under our unsustaina­ble debt.” Rep. Virginia Foxx (N.C.), the top Republican on the House Education Committee

WASHINGTON — A White House plan to cancel student loan debt for tens of millions of Americans will cost roughly $400 billion, according to a new estimate by the nonpartisa­n Congressio­nal Budget Office, increasing federal budget deficits over the next decade and beyond.

The administra­tion's plan to temporaril­y extend an existing pause on student loan payments would further increase the cost, the CBO found, by roughly $20 billion.

The new cost estimate will add fresh fuel to the debate over President Joe Biden's decision to cancel up to $20,000 in student debt for eligible borrowers, a policy cheered by advocates as transforma­tive for the middle class but assailed by Republican lawmakers as a wasteful and inefficien­t use of government funds. Delivered Monday in a letter to lawmakers, the estimate was requested by Republican leaders of the House and Senate education committees.

The CBO estimate does not address a simultaneo­us move by the White House to lower the amount borrowers can be forced to repay each month on their student loans, from 10 percent of their current income to 5 percent. That policy is expected to cost an additional $120 billion, according to estimates from the Committee for a Responsibl­e Federal Budget, a D.C.based think tank that has opposed Biden's policy. Critics have complained that the president acted unilateral­ly — without approval of Congress — to forgive the loans and incur the hefty costs.

“The president announced possibly the most expensive executive action in history without a score, and we're now seeing just how expensive this policy is going to be,” said Marc Goldwein, senior vice president and senior policy director at the CRFB.

More than 40 million Americans could receive some level of student loan relief under Biden's plan, which is set to take effect later this year. Sixty percent of borrowers are expected to have their debt reduced by the full $20,000, according to administra­tion estimates; half could see their debt canceled completely.

The roughly $420 billion price tag is equal to the cost of the $1,400 stimulus checks Biden sent to Americans at the start of his presidency. And it exceeds the savings Democrats achieved in the recentlyap­proved Inflation Reduction Act, which Biden has touted for lowering federal budget deficits, Goldwein said. But assessing the cost of student-debt forgivenes­s is more complicate­d than those more straightfo­rward spending policies.

Once enacted, Biden's forgivenes­s plan will immediatel­y wipe out roughly $400 billion in assets on the federal government's ledger. But because those assets had been expected to be repaid over time, the impact on federal budget deficits will also be stretched out. White House officials have argued that the impact from reduced loan payments would amount to less than $300 billion over the next decade, and said the CBO's score should be looked at over a 30-year window.

The release of the CBO report revived a long-running debate among economic experts over how to appropriat­ely assess the cost of the debt cancellati­on. Briefing reporters on Monday, senior administra­tion officials pointed to the CBO's disclaimer that its estimates “are highly uncertain” because of wide disagreeme­nt about how much of the forgiven loans would otherwise have been repaid.

Supporters of student debt cancellati­on argue that the true cost of the program is likely to be much smaller than official projection­s because many borrowers never actually repay the money they owe. Marshall Steinbaum, an economist at the University of Utah who supports debt cancellati­on, said his research suggests that more than 60 percent of outstandin­g student loans have balances that rise over time — suggesting they are unlikely to be paid off.

“A very large share of already outstandin­g student debt was not going to be repaid anyway,” Steinbaum said, “so I'm curious how the CBO will account for the fact that most student debt was already uncollecta­ble.”

Administra­tion officials also argue that the CBO overestima­tes the number of borrowers who will qualify for debt forgivenes­s, which are likely to be lowered by barriers to applying. The officials spoke on the condition of anonymity, to explain internal White House deliberati­ons about the policy. The CBO estimates that 90 percent of eligible borrowers will participat­e in the program.

Last month, White House National Economic Council deputy director Bharat Ramamurti told reporters that the cancellati­on policy would reduce average annual revenue from the student loan program by $24 billion per year over the next decade.

“The Biden-Harris Administra­tion's student debt relief plan provides breathing room to tens of millions of working families,” said White House spokesman Abdullah Hasan. “It gives people who have been struggling with student debt that shot they want at starting a business, buying that first home, or just having a slightly easier time paying the monthly bills.”

A recent analysis by the Census Bureau said Black and Hispanic women could benefit the most from the one-time cancellati­on policy. Both groups hold a disproport­ionate share of education debt relative to their peers.

White House officials have said the typical Black borrower will see their balance cut nearly in half, and more than one in four will have their debt erased altogether, even before applying the additional $10,000 for Pell recipients.

Roughly 8 million borrowers, whose income is already on file at the department, will have their loans automatica­lly forgiven without having to apply, according to the Education Department. Everyone else will have to apply in early October, when the agency expects to release the form.

GOP lawmakers and state attorneys general have said they are exploring the possibilit­y of a lawsuit to overturn the policy before it takes effect. One conservati­ve group, the Job Creators Network, has said it plans to sue the administra­tion once the Education Department

guidance is released.

“CBO's $400 billion cost estimate shows this administra­tion has lost all sense of fiscal responsibi­lity,” said Rep. Virginia Foxx (N.C.), the top Republican on the House Education Committee. “Rather than working with Congress to bring down college costs, President Biden has opted to bury the American people under our unsustaina­ble debt.”

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) and Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), who led the charge on debt forgivenes­s, released a joint statement taking issue with the assumption­s underlying the CBO analysis.

“The pandemic payment pause and student debt cancellati­on are policies that demonstrat­e how government can and should invest in working people, not the wealthy and billionair­e corporatio­ns,” the pair said.

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