I am in favor of politicians keeping campaign promises they ran on. He ran on $10,000 loan forgiveness.
Way to go Joe!
Also, the way this is structured is great.
Biden’s program will cancel $10,000 in student loan debt (and $20,000 for Pell grant recipients); the plan applies to borrowers making less than $125,000 a year ($250,000 for couples).
It won’t apply to the highest end of the income scale, and it won’t wipe out all the debt of those with more modest incomes, but it will lighten their burden, which has been compounded by escalating costs of college education.
As with any issue involving billions of dollars and the question of fairness (many worked hard, sacrificed and paid off student loans), forgiving student loans is polarizing. There are critics to the left of Biden who believe the amount forgiven is too small and this action doesn’t address the root causes of rising college costs. And there are critics on the right who see this as a giveaway.
But the true frustration over Biden’s student loan forgiveness program crosses ideological and party lines and is voiced by people who see it as unfair that 43 million people are being given the kind of break that hasn’t been available to previous generations who paid back their loans.
Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell called it “a slap in the face to every family who sacrificed to save for college,” a statement that appears to assume that those benefiting from loan forgiveness aren’t from families who sacrificed to save for college.
But as Time correspondent Charlotte Alter wrote, “when McConnell graduated from the University of Louisville in 1964, annual tuition cost $330 (or roughly $2,500 when adjusted for inflation); today, it costs more than $12,000, a 380% increase.”
As the cost of attending four-year public and private colleges has increased over the last 30 years, federal support has lagged. Pell grants, which are awarded to undergraduate students with exceptional financial need, used to cover almost 80 percent of the cost of a four-year degree, but now, they only cover about one-third of the cost.
Undergraduates with loans, according to the Department of Education, graduate with almost $25,000 in debt.
Directing anger at and casting judgment on borrowers whose loans will be forgiven is wrong. We should be far more concerned about the barriers many face to higher education, how vocational schools can be made more accessible, and how to address the root causes of rising tuition costs.
While we understand why people might fret that the student loan forgiveness program will encourage a get-something-for-nothing attitude, the concern strikes us as off target given how many people have struggled with paying back student loans. In the end, the more accessible education is, the better off we are as a society.
Because someone is eligible for student loan forgiveness doesn’t mean that person didn’t study any harder, didn’t work jobs to support themselves or didn’t sacrifice as much as someone who already has off their loans.
Nor does it mean they will glide through life because they no longer must pay $10,000 to $20,000 in loans. They will spend that money on the necessities of life and put money back into the economy.
Also, it’s best if those whose Paycheck Protection Program loans were forgiven, many Republican politicians, not be so resistant about student loan forgiveness. The same goes for those who have benefited from or celebrated corporate tax cuts.
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https://www.expressnews.com/opinion/edi ... 405542.php