student loan debt up to $10,000 will be forgiven for millions of borrowers who qualify, according to sources familiar with the plan.
The long-anticipated move is expected to be accompanied by an extension until January of the federal student loan payment pause, which has been in place since March 2020 and was set to expire Aug. 31.
Here’s what we know:
Paid off debt, built a house, kept food on the table
AMERICANS ARE DIVIDED:On whether student loan forgiveness fair to those without college degrees.
The administration already has erased roughly $32 billion in student debt for 1.6 million borrowers by widening the eligibility requirements for pre-existing relief programs. It cleared the debt of those who attended predatory colleges and the permanently disabled. It also has canceled more than $10 billion in student debt for those working in the public sector.
Biden’s latest plans mean forgiving billions more in student loan debt for millions of borrowers, eclipsing the administration’s past actions. Yet millions of Americans will be left with student loan debt, especially those who pursued advanced degrees or had less financial support from their families or scholarships to pay for college.
It’s not clear how far the plan will go or what it will cost. One analysis found that forgiving $10,000 per borrower would wipe $321 billion in student loan debt, and it would completely erase the debt for about a third of borrowers, or roughly 12 million people. Another this week found that forgiving federal college student loan debt will cost between $300 billion and $980 billion over 10 years, depending on exactly how the program is rolled out.
An analysis of student debt by Mark Kantrowitz, who has written several books about student financial aid, estimated that forgiving the debt of borrowers who owe $10,000 or less and make less than $125,000 annually would cost about $46 billion and cover 23.5% of borrowers.
Progressives led by Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, Sen. Elizabeth Warren and Rep. Ayanna Pressley repeatedly called on the administration to cancel $50,000 in debt per borrower. But the top conservatives on education committees, Sen. Richard Burr and Rep. Virginia Foxx, have questioned the Education Department’s authority to freeze student loan payments and discharge debt.