The decision, expected Wednesday, will cap months of deliberations over fairness and the potential to exacerbate an inflation rate that has reached a 40-year high.
-
Send any friend a story
As a subscriber, you have “>10 gift articles to give each month. Anyone can read what you share.
Give this article
- Read in app
Activists have escalated pressure in recent months on President Biden to cancel student debt.
WASHINGTON — President Biden will announce a decision on Wednesday about his plans for student loan debt relief, a highly anticipated moment that could affect about 45 million borrowers nationwide, according to people familiar with the matter.
Although details of the plan were still being finalized, White House aides have said Mr. Biden was weighing a targeted plan that would provide $10,000 of debt relief for borrowers who make below a certain level of income.
Mr. Biden also is expected to extend a pause on loan payments for all borrowers, a Trump-era program that has been in effect since the start of the pandemic.
Mr. Biden has faced calls to cancel student debt throughout his presidency, driven by borrowers and the progressive wing of his Democratic Party. He backed the idea on the campaign trail in 2020, saying: “I’m going to make sure that everybody in this generation gets $10,000 knocked off of their student debt as we try to get out of this godawful pandemic.”
But White House aides say the president has agonized over the decision, questioning whether cancellation should apply to students of both public and private universities and saying he does not want the relief to apply to those earning high incomes.
The Biden Presidency
With midterm elections looming, here’s where President Biden stands.
- On a Roll: After a string of victories, it remains to be seen if President Biden is at a decisive turning point or merely a transitory moment.
- ‘Dark Brandon’ Rises: White House officials recently began to embrace this repackaged internet meme. Here is the story behind it and what it tells us about the administration.
- Questions About 2024: Mr. Biden has said he plans to run for a second term, but at 79, his age has become an uncomfortable issue.
- A Familiar Foreign Policy: So far, Mr. Biden’s approach to foreign policy is surprisingly consistent with the Trump administration, analysts say.
The decision will add fuel to debates raging in Washington — and within the Democratic Party — about economic fairness and the potential to exacerbate an inflation rate that has reached a 40-year high.
Mr. Biden had promised a decision by the end of the month, but he is expected to return to the White House on Wednesday from Delaware, where he is on vacation with his family.
“The president will have more to say on this before Aug. 31,” said Abdullah Hasan, a White House spokesman. “No one with a federally held loan has had to pay a single dime in student loans since President Biden took office.”
Mr. Hasan also noted that the Biden administration has “already canceled about $32 billion in debt for more than 1.6 million Americans,” a reference to actions to revive and expand targeted relief programs that had all but stopped functioning during the Trump administration.
The Biden administration has wiped out debts for eligible public service workers, permanently disabled borrowers, defrauded students and people whose schools abruptly closed while they were enrolled.
What we consider before using anonymous sources. How do the sources know the information? What’s their motivation for telling us? Have they proved reliable in the past? Can we corroborate the information? Even with these questions satisfied, The Times uses anonymous sources as a last resort. The reporter and at least one editor know the identity of the source.
Learn more about our process.
Mr. Biden’s decision is likely to draw criticism from the left and the right. The amount of debt cancellation Mr. Biden is considering does not go nearly as far as many Democratic lawmakers and progressive groups, including racial justice advocates, have asked for. Senator Chuck Schumer of New York, the majority leader, other influential Democrats and several civil rights organizations have pushed Mr. Biden to forgive $50,000 per borrower.
White House officials have quietly been preparing for months for the likelihood that Mr. Biden would ultimately decide to pair targeted loan forgiveness with an eventual restart of payments.
Administration officials say that the combination of eventually restarting payments while forgiving debt for a targeted group will not add to rising prices and that the relief will aid lower-income borrowers who are struggling to afford soaring food and rent.
But Republicans and some Democratic economists say the policies will add to inflation by giving consumers more money to spend.
Derrick Johnson, the president of the N.A.A.C.P., said on Tuesday that if Mr. Biden moves forward with the plan of providing just $10,000 of relief with income caps, “we’ve got a problem.”
“Tragically, we’ve experienced this so many times before,” Mr. Johnson said in a statement, noting the Senate’s failure to pass police reform. “President Biden’s decision on student debt cannot become the latest example of a policy that has left Black people — especially Black women — behind.”
He said the potential plan was no way to treat “Black voters who turned out in record numbers to once again save democracy in 2020.”
Republicans have called any debt cancellation a handout to largely high-income college graduates. Some economists warn it could lead colleges and universities to raise tuition prices, in anticipation of future loan relief.
Congressional offices, outside groups and even the companies that service federal student loans have been left to guess at Mr. Biden’s eventual move.
“We haven’t heard if they’re looking at forgiveness or a payment pause or both,” Scott Buchanan, the executive director for the Student Loan Servicing Alliance, a trade group, said on Monday. “I don’t know what the plan is, nor have servicers even been consulted about how they would do that and what’s possible to implement. That’s my deep fear — that they announce something here and it’s not doable.”
Erica L. Green contributed reporting.
Source: nytimes.com