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Florida Voting Guide

Biden’s New Student Loan Repayment Plan Would Help Millions of Working and Middle-Class Americans 

By Keya Vakil

January 24, 2023
florida voting guide

Under the new plan, borrowers who earn less than roughly $30,600 a year would owe $0 a month on their federal student loans, effectively pausing them. An estimated 8.5 million borrowers are enrolled in existing income-driven repayment plans and stand to benefit from the proposal. The plan would apply to future borrowers as well.

The Biden administration this month released the details of its updated student loan repayment plan which would help millions of borrowers cut their monthly payments by half, while completely pausing payments for others. 

The changes, proposed earlier this month by the US Department of Education, would revise the agency’s existing income-driven repayment plan known as REPAYE and reduce payments on undergraduate loans to 5% of discretionary income (the amount left over after you cover necessities like food and rent), down from 10% in the existing REPAYE plan and 15% in other income-based repayment plans, which are being phased out as part of the new rule. Graduate borrowers would pay 10% of their discretionary income.

Under the new plan, borrowers who earn less than roughly $30,600 a year would owe $0 a month on their federal student loans, effectively pausing them. A borrower who’s in a family of four and makes less than roughly $62,400 would also see their payments paused.

The rule would also help borrowers’ avoid rising loan balances due to interest. As long as borrowers make their monthly payments, even if they’re $0, their balances will no longer grow or accumulate interest. 

The new rules also adjust the payment formula so that more income is protected to help borrowers meet their basic needs. 

An estimated 8.5 million borrowers are enrolled in existing income-driven repayment plans and stand to benefit from the proposal. The plan would apply to future borrowers as well.

The department estimates that future borrowers would see their total payments decrease by 40%. Families earning less than $29,000 a year on average would pay 83% less under the proposal, while those making above $90,000 would see only a 5% decrease in payments. 

The plan would also help nearly nine in 10 community college borrowers become debt-free within a decade. 

The proposal comes as the cost of higher education has spiraled out of control over the past few decades.

“We cannot return to the same broken system we had before the pandemic, when a million borrowers defaulted on their loans a year and snowballing interest left millions owing more than they initially borrowed,” Secretary of Education Miguel Cardona said in a statement

The plan would also benefit borrowers who took out smaller loans. Individuals who took out loans with original balances of $12,000 or less total would only have to make payments for 10 years before the remaining amount is canceled, down from 20 years at present. 

Notably, parents who borrowed money to pay for their kids’ higher education using Parent PLUS loans cannot enroll in the new plan.

In a statement, Persis Yu, deputy executive director of the Student Borrower Protection Center praised the proposal, calling it a “remarkable shift in the way the government supports struggling student loan borrowers.” But Yu also called on the Biden administration to allow ParentPLUS loan borrowers to benefit from it as well. 

“Low-income families—especially low-income families of color—are more likely to rely on ParentPLUS loans or need to get a graduate degree to earn the same salary as their wealthier white peers. Equity demands that these borrowers have equal access to an affordable payment plan and the necessary supports to free themselves from the crushing weight of student debt,” Yu said. “The Secretary must include them in the final rule.”

The rule is currently going through a public comment period, and the department expects to finalize the rules and begin implementing the changes later this year.

The remainder of Biden’s student debt cancellation plan has been temporarily blocked by the Courts due to Republican-led lawsuits. The Supreme Court is expected to hear an appeal from the Biden administration in late February. If the Court allows Biden’s plan to proceed, it would cancel $20,000 in student debt for Pell Grant recipients and up to $10,000 for other individual borrowers earning under $125,000 per year.

Author

  • Keya Vakil

    Keya Vakil is the deputy political editor at COURIER. He previously worked as a researcher in the film industry and dabbled in the political world.

CATEGORIES: COMMUNITY
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