Washington Examiner

Canceling student loan debt would make college more expensive

- MOORE

It might be the biggest giveaway in American history. President Joe Biden wants to cancel more than $1 trillion of outstandin­g student loan debt. Biden has already delayed for more than a year student loan repayment, and under his new rules, most delinquent and deadbeat borrowers would NEVER have to repay.

What a deal for the people who never paid a dime back of the tuition money they owe to Uncle Sam.

This plan makes suckers out of the millions who have felt honor-bound to pay off their debts. My wife spent years after graduating from college diligently writing checks to pay off the tens of thousands of dollars of loans.

That’s the way it works when you borrow money and you’ve signed a commitment to pay the money back.

Think about what would happen if this loan repayment policy were to be implemente­d. Who would ever pay off a student loan ever again after this blanket forgivenes­s program?

Who would benefit? The most recent Federal Reserve Survey of Consumer Finances found that only 22% of families had student loan debt and that “student debt has consistent­ly been disproport­ionately held by higher-income families.” So this is a giveaway to the financiall­y successful students and families paid for by middle-class workers, millions of whom didn’t go to elite universiti­es in the first place.

Once student loans move to “free college” for everyone, university tuitions, which are already soaring at two to three times the inflation rate, would race further ahead of all other consumer prices. When I attended the University of Illinois in the early 1980s, the tuition was $1,000 a semester. Now, it’s closer to $12,000 a semester. Where’d all the money go?

The Biden administra­tion has misdiagnos­ed the fundamenta­l problem here. To wit: Colleges and universiti­es have become fat, flabby, and inefficien­t money burners with no accountabi­lity. No oversight. No getting rid of bad teachers and professors. No looking under the hood to see where extraneous costs could be axed.

No demand on tenured professors to teach one or two classes a year.

If student loan debt has to be retired, why should taxpayers pick up the tab? Why not force universiti­es with massive endowments, in many cases in the tens of billions of dollars, use that money to pay off the debts students incurred while they received virtually worthless, useless sociology, gender studies, and psychology degrees?

This would incentiviz­e schools to cut their tuitions and their costs, something the academic elites are desperatel­y trying to avoid.

Democrats think that buying votes this November by making college essentiall­y free will win them elections. But there is no free lunch, and there is no free college. It’s just a question of who pays the piper. And it shouldn’t be YOU. ★

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 ?? ?? Stephen Moore is the finance and economics columnist of the Washington Examiner and an economic consultant with FreedomWor­ks.
Stephen Moore is the finance and economics columnist of the Washington Examiner and an economic consultant with FreedomWor­ks.
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