Biden’s Student Loan Forgiveness Could Cost U.S Taxpayers over $1 Trillion, Analysis Reveals

Democrat President Joe Biden’s plan to wipe the student debts of college-educated voters could end up costing American taxpayers over $1 trillion, a new analysis of the scheme has revealed.

On Friday, the White House claimed that Biden’s student loan forgiveness plan will only cost $240 billion.

However, a new analysis from the Penn Wharton Budget Model suggests the Biden administration is woefully miscalculating the extended cost of the controversial plan.

During the White House press briefing, the deputy director of the National Economic Council, Bharat Ramamurti, told reporters that officials expect the plan to cost taxpayers $24 billion per year for the next decade.

“Our estimate is that the debt relief proposal will reduce average annual receipts in the student loan program by about $24 billion a year over the next 10 years,” Ramamurti said.

“So the way to think about this is that, because we are providing debt relief, reducing the outstanding balance for some people, eliminating it for other people, that means we’re not going to be collecting a certain amount of payments that we otherwise would have been collecting,” he added.

Shockingly, Ramamurti reiterated the White House’s position that the plan is fully financed by deficit reduction that is attributed to pandemic-related spending that has since waned.

Biden’s plan will forgive $10,000 of student loan debt per borrower who earns less than $125,000 annually — and $20,000 per Pell Grant recipient.

Those who paid off their debts, who didn’t take loans, who worked through college to pay their own way, or who chose not to go on to higher education, get nothing.

The analysis, published on Friday, found that the plan will cost $519 billion in taxpayer money.

Additionally, Biden’s extension of the payment moratorium will cost $16 billion.

The biggest question mark is the new income-driven repayment program.

The program is being significantly altered to ease the financial burden of paying back student loans.

Slay the latest News for free!

We don’t spam! Read our privacy policy for more info.

Penn Wharton said that portion of the plan will cost at least $70 billion.

However, Penn Wharton also explained the new IDR program could cost as much as $450 billion — or more.

From the analysis:

[M]any borrowers who anticipate not being qualified in future years [for the IDR program] would typically be better off enrolling in the intermediate years in which they are qualified.

There would also be financial incentives for future borrowers to shift education financing toward more borrowing to take advantage of the 5% repayment threshold.

If the Department of Education simply auto-enrolled borrowers for which it had sufficient information (i.e., switched from “opt in” to “opt out”), the additional costs of the IDR program alone could reasonably exceed $450 billion.

If the IDR program indeed costs that much, the total cost of Biden’s plan could exceed $1 trillion, the analysis said.

Penn Wharton adds that additional study is needed as the administration rolls out more program details.

SHARE:
Advertise with Slay News
join telegram

READERS' POLL

Who is the best president?

By completing this poll, you gain access to our free newsletter. Unsubscribe at any time.

By Frank Bergman

Frank Bergman is a political/economic journalist living on the east coast. Aside from news reporting, Bergman also conducts interviews with researchers and material experts and investigates influential individuals and organizations in the sociopolitical world.

Subscribe
Notify of
9
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x