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Eakinomics: Debt
Forgiveness Dilemma
President-elect Joe Biden campaigned on the promise of
significant, or even complete, forgiveness of student loans. This is a bad
idea. Student loan forgiveness does not do anything to improve the quality of
educational outcomes in the United States. Student loan forgiveness does not
do anything to help a future high school graduate afford college. Forgiveness
is a backward-looking policy that does nothing to improve the future
efficiency of, and access to, the system of higher education.
The only impact on the future is to create moral hazard – the notion that
past forgiveness programs will be repeated, thus reducing the incentive to
repay loans in a timely fashion. Student loan forgiveness will take a rotten
system and make it worse. Oh, and who will pick up the tab for both any
forgiveness and future non-payments? The taxpayer, of course. Since taxpayers
back the student loans, forgiveness is conceptually equivalent to sending
taxpayer financed checks in the amount of the forgiveness to each loan
holder.
The question now facing the future Biden
Administration is: Who gets the (conceptual) checks?
Not surprisingly, once you get into a policy as unprincipled as forgiveness,
there aren’t many principles to guide the decision on who wins and who loses.
Some recent research from the University of
Chicago, however, provides some surprising insight into who the potential
winners might be: “Full or partial forgiveness is regressive because high
earners took larger loans, but also because, for low earners, balances greatly
overstate present values. Consequently, forgiveness would benefit the top
decile as much as the bottom three deciles combined. Blacks and Hispanics
would also benefit substantially less than balances suggest.” (“Balances
greatly overstate present values” because low earners will have their
payments reduced under the current system – maybe even to zero – and have
some residual balances forgiven. The current balance is a misleading
indicator of actual future payments.)
The notion that the top 10 percent gain as much as the bottom 30 percent
combined would seem to fly in the face of the idea that this is a way to make
things more fair. So forgiveness
is neither efficient nor fair. Instead, the authors note,
“Enrolling households who would benefit from income-driven repayment is the
least expensive and most progressive policy we consider.”
In the end, the right thing to do is to start anew with federal support for
higher education. The worst thing to do is forgive past loans. If the
politics demand action somewhere in between, income-based repayment appears
to be the best candidate.
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