Eakinomics: Who
Benefits from Student Loan Forgiveness
It’s been infrastructure week so long, I nearly forgot that there are other
policy issues. It was unsurprising, however, that the minute I started
looking the first thing I ran into was student debt forgiveness, with Fortune
reporting,
“On Friday, the U.S.
Department of Education announced it will discharge student
loans totaling $55.6 million by students who attended troubled schools like
Westwood College, Marinello Schools of Beauty, and the Court Reporting
Institute.” This forgiveness took place under the auspices of the “borrower
defense” policy, but the whole notion of widescale forgiveness
remains on the table.
Fortunately, Tom Lee has run the
numbers on the implications of blanket loan forgiveness and they
are stunning. To begin, “More than 60 percent of federal student loan holders
have entered and remained in forbearance on their loans since the third
quarter of 2020, a 47.8 percentage point increase from the previous quarter,
while just 1 percent of all borrowers are regularly making payments right
now.” One, 1, uno percent. So, at least at the moment, nobody is
paying their student loans. (The chart is reproduced from Lee’s paper.)
Chart 1: Distribution of Federal Direct Loans by Status
The next step being contemplated is a blanket forgiveness of $10,000 using
administrative authorities. The table below, reproduced from Lee’s paper,
shows the dramatic implications of doing this. Such a policy would fully
eliminate the balances from the smallest categories of balances, but would
have a large impact on those with large balances as well.
Table 1: Federal Student Loan Portfolio by Borrower Debt Size as of the
Second Quarter of 2021
As it turns out, those larger balances are concentrated among more affluent
borrowers. As a result, the policy would “reduce outstanding federal student
loan debt by $380 billion, but more than half of this relief would go toward
families in the top 40 percent of income, while the bottom 40 percent would
receive just a quarter of the relief.”
There are lots of reasons to be skeptical of student loan forgiveness, but
blanket, untargeted approaches should be off the table.
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