


GOP hypocrisy over student debt plan

The hypocrisy meter has been stuck at the high end as Republicans and conservatives fill the airwaves and social media to decry President Biden’s student loan forgiveness proposal.
Now they have something else to grouse about: The White House has been gleefully pointing out on Twitter that many of those going public with complaints about forgiving $10,000 or $20,000 in student debt had themselves gotten federal COVID relief loans forgiven — often for sums in the hundreds of thousands of dollars, or even more than a million.
For example, the White House Twitter feed paired the statement from congressional performance artist Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) that “for our government just to say ok your debt is completely forgiven.. it’s completely unfair,” with the observation that Greene received forgiveness for $183,504 in COVID relief loans.
This skewering is amusing, in its way, but is it fair? Defenders of the Republican critics assert that it’s not. The Paycheck Protection Program, or PPP, they observe, was enacted specifically as a bulwark against a pandemic-related economic crash.
Loan forgiveness was baked into the program from the start, they add: Borrowers were told their loans would be forgiven if they used the money to keep their workers employed during COVID shutdowns or for utilities or rent.
That’s true, but irrelevant for several reasons. One is that much of the criticism coming from GOP officeholders or other conservatives has nothing to do with what the loans are used for. The critics are making a categorical assertion that repaying borrowed money is a duty, no matter what.
The defenders also argue that PPP was designed for an urgent public purpose. But who says that student loans are not designed for an urgent public purpose — that is, to expand the accessibility of higher education, which is widely regarded as a public good, to millions of Americans who might be denied it because of its cost?
Forgiveness has also been baked into the student loan program through income-driven repayment plans, which were first implemented in 1994, almost 30 years ago. Income-driven repayment programs limit student borrowers’ repayments to a percentage of their annual income, typically 10%. After 10 to 25 years of repayments, the remaining loan balances are, yes, forgiven.
The income-driven repayment option hasn’t been taken up by as many borrowers as could benefit, but that may now change. Biden’s program makes it more advantageous by cutting the annual obligation to 5% of income and ensuring that the forgiven portion of the loans is not treated as taxable income, as are forgiven loans in other contexts.
That brings us to the fundamental hypocrisy underlying criticisms of Biden’s student loan relief proposals. This is the notion that borrowers have a moral duty to repay their debt, come hell or high water.
Superficially, that sounds right. It’s tied in with the strictures against stealing and lying that date back at least to the Ten Commandments. In practice, however, it’s hogwash.
We know this because debt forgiveness is embedded in our entire credit system.
The higher interest rates that some borrowers pay than others reflect lenders’ judgments about the prospects that the borrowers will default or that their collateral will be insufficient to cover the defaulted balance, or both. If the moral obligation to pay one’s debts were a hard and fast rule, then everyone would pay the same rate.
Debt forgiveness is also implicit in our bankruptcy system, which is designed to give borrowers a fresh start by eradicating all or part of their debt. Republicans who are unclear about this should ask the putative head of their party, Donald Trump, who placed six properties into bankruptcy from 1991 to 2009.
As it happens, student loans are in the small category of loans that cannot be discharged — that is, eradicated — in Bankruptcy Court.
It’s the result of a panic over student loan defaults starting in the 1970s that was never supported by any actual data.
Starting in 1976, student loans were rendered ineligible for bankruptcy discharge in their first five years. In 1990, the five-year limit was extended to seven years, and in 1998 eliminated, making the loans ineligible for bankruptcy relief entirely. The only exception is for “undue hardship,” which is undefined in the law and seldom invoked.
“Somewhat like the stories of mothers on public assistance riding in Cadillacs to buy steaks with food stamps,” Deanne Loonin of the National Consumer Loan Center reported in 2006, “stories of doctors making big bucks discharging their hefty student loans caught the attention of Congress, the media, and the public.”
Those yarns were never authenticated, however. In fact, the Government Accountability Office determined in 1978 that although the default rate on student loans was 18%, less than 4% of the amounts borrowed were discharged in bankruptcy, resulting in an overall discharge rate of less than three-quarters of 1%, better than the rate on other consumer loans.
Making student loans dischargeable in bankruptcy isn’t part of Biden’s package, but is the focus of advocates intent on carrying Biden’s reforms forward.
Another claim made by critics of the Biden plan demands to be addressed. The claim is that student debt relief will chiefly benefit wealthy families or borrowers who won’t have any difficulty paying their loans without help, such as future doctors, lawyers and business school graduates. The hard numbers expose this claim as nonsense.
MBA graduates accounted for 2.6% of all student loan borrowers who received their degrees in 2015-16, lawyers were 1% and doctors 0.5%, according to statistics released by the Department of Education in 2020. That means that about 4% of all borrowers fell into those high-profile, well-paid career categories.
Will they be laughing all the way to the bank? Doubtful. “Clearly a significant portion of them will be excluded from relief” by the income cap of $125,000 imposed by the Biden program on recipients of debt forgiveness, Bharat Ramamurti, deputy director of the National Economic Council, a White House adjunct, observed on Twitter.
Who will get the greater benefit from forgiveness? As Ramamurti observes, it’s the borrowers who receive Pell Grants, federal stipends aimed at lower-income students. They’ll be eligible for $20,000 in forgiveness, twice the sum provided for other borrowers within the income cap.
Pell Grant recipients account for 27 million student loan borrowers, or 60% of the total, Ramamurti says. Nearly all come from families with less than $60,000 in annual income.
“This is why it’s galling to hear many refer to borrowers as slackers,” Ramamurti adds, referring to a theme popular among Republicans and conservatives asserting that working Americans will be shouldering the debt for these freeloaders. “These are typically people from lower-income families ... trying to get a degree, and then using their income to help their families as well as pay down their own debt,” Ramamurti counters. “Slackers?”
It’s well past time for the critics of student debt relief to get honest about their real purpose. It’s to protect wealthier Americans who fear their income taxes will have to rise to pay for that relief. Biden’s plan may be the most significant reversal of the flow of government resources in years, following a long period in which the rich saw their tax rates plummet while those of almost everyone else rose.