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Every American taxpayer will pay $2,500 to cover student loan ‘forgiveness’

Every American taxpayer will pay $2,500 to cover the cost of President Joe Biden’s student debt “cancellation” plan.

That’s the shocking accounting study conducted by the National Taxpayers Union Foundation (NTUF).

Biden’s controversial and unpopular plan would eliminate $10,000 worth of personal student by using federal taxpayer money, in part, to pay banks and other lending institutions on behalf of borrowers. For borrowers who received federal Pell Grants, $20,000 worth of debt would be eliminated. NTUF calculates that such a move will add $386–405 billion in net costs to taxpayers based on conservative assumptions, it said in a blog post on Aug. 25. This would mean that each American taxpayer would bear an extra burden of $2,503.22, up by more than $400 from an earlier estimate.

In case of $10,000 loan cancellations, taxpayers making up to $50,000 would bear $190 more, while those making between $100,000 and $200,000 would bear an extra $3,790. The highest average burden—at a whopping $11,940—will be borne by taxpayers earning between $200,000 and $500,000.

The debt cancellation program “more than wipes out” the deficit reduction projected to be achieved by the recently passed Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) in the first decade, stated the organization. The deficit increase from canceling student loans is expected to exceed IRA’s deficit reduction by $100 billion.

A recent analysis by the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget also found that the effect of student loan cancellations will not even last long.

“We estimate that if all eligible borrowers receive debt cancellation, the overall student debt portfolio would return to its current level of $1.6 trillion in five and a half years—in 2028,” CRFB said. “In inflation-adjusted dollars, student debt would return to its current level in 2031.”

NTUF expressed concerns about the negative effects loan cancellations will have on higher education institutions and future borrowers. The organization believes colleges and universities will eventually raise their fees.

An estimate by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York states that college tuition fees rise by 60 cents for every dollar of subsidized student loan. NTUF also believes borrowers might take riskier decisions.

In addition, government administrators who oversee federal student loan programs may slack off when it comes to loan serviceability due to expecting debt cancellations, it warned.

Gary Wolfram, a professor of economics at Hillsdale College, raised ethical concerns about Biden’s debt cancellation program.

People who went to community college and worked full-time so as to avoid taking a loan will now have to pay taxes for forgiving loans that some “upper-middle-class student” took, he pointed out.

“And what about the people who paid back their loan? Everybody who paid it back should get a check for $10,000. That would be the rational thing to do,” he added.

–Wire services

 

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