Will Your Student Loan Debt Be Forgiven? - YouTube

Channel: CNBC Make It

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If you have student debt, you are far from alone in the United States, roughly 45 million
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Americans collectively over one point seven trillion dollars in student debt.
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And many people are hoping for forgiveness because simply put, the student debt crisis has
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gotten out of control.
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In the past, the US used to highly subsidize higher education, which gave people a chance to
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work their way through school.
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But today, that's almost impossible.
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Today, a college in working a minimum wage job 40 hours a week would make about fifteen thousand
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dollars. But during the 2019-2020 academic year, college costs averaged about
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30,000 dollars.
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Here's what's being proposed and what the controversies are.
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This is Make It Explores.
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In the past 10 years, college costs have increased by more than 16 percent and student debt has
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increased by nearly 100 percent, which means that roughly 70 percent of colleges today take
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out debt to pay for their education.
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But here's the frustrating thing, those people who take out debt have very rational reasons for
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taking out loans. Automation is rapidly eliminating jobs for those without a college
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degree, and college graduates earn 80 percent more than those without a college degree.
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The gap in average life expectancy between those with and without a college degree is growing
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Prior to the pandemic.
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Nearly one in four student loan borrowers are behind on their loans, and one in five was in
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default, which is important, an important distinction because the consequences of default
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are so devastating.
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Approximately one hundred and sixty five billion worth of federally managed student loans are
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currently considered in default, which means someone hasn't been able to make a payment in 270
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days. And that total may increase once the federal pause on student loans expires.
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Now, many legislators appear more serious about student loan forgiveness than ever before.
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There are currently two options for student debt forgiveness being discussed.
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House and Senate Democrats want Biden to broadly forgive up to fifty thousand dollars of federal
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student debt through executive order.
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Biden says he's in favor of ten thousand dollars in student debt with some conditions and that he
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wants Congress to do it. And the battle between these two options has created some disagreements.
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The first disagreement is about whether Biden has the power to cancel debt through executive order
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in the first place.
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President Biden absolutely has the authority to cancel student debt.
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This is the same authority that was used by the Trump administration last year to waive
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interest in past payments for federal borrowers who had federally held loans.
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He has the authority to direct the secretary of education to at least cancel all of the
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student debt held by the federal government, which is about 90 percent of the student debt out
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there.
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But then there's the question of who's in debt forgiveness would benefit.
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There are some economists who say that people with ten thousand dollars of student debt are
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actually the most likely to go into default.
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They tend to be more in the category of a student who started at a community college, something
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some unforeseen event occurred in their life.
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They didn't graduate.
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Certainly there are students who borrowed 50,000 dollars to go to, you know, a four year college or
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whatever and are struggling to pay it back.
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But there's plenty of students who borrowed that 50,000 dollars who are going to get that money
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back.
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We would see a significant number of borrowers in default, have their entire loan balances canceled
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at ten thousand dollars of student loan debt.
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It would be about two thirds of borrowers in default would have their loan canceled.
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However, at fifty thousand dollars, between 93 percent of student loan borrowers in default have
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their loans canceled.
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White students make up the majority of college students and thus borrowers.
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But Black students often take out larger amounts of student debt and are more likely to have
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trouble repaying their loans after graduation.
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The Brookings Institution estimates that on average, Black college graduates of 52,000 dollars
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in student debt while White college graduates owecloser to twenty eight thousand.
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African-American borrowers in particular have to take on more debt in order to get an education.
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And they often struggle more to repay those loans.
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There's a study out of Brandeis that showed that 20 years into repayment, the typical black
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borrower still owed 95 percent of the original balance, while the typical white
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borrower only four percent of their original balance.
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And then there was the controversy when Biden claimed that fifty thousand dollars of debt
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forgiveness would lead to forgiving, quote, billions of dollars of debt for people who have
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gone to Harvard and Yale and Penn.
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And this is misleading.
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Just point, five percent of college kids attend Ivy League schools like these.
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And many of the students who attend these schools don't need to take out loans.
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But what I think Biden is getting at is the sense of what's fair.
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Is it fair for people who got the chance to go to college, a chance many Americans don't get, to
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have their debts forgiven? And what about the people who skip college, but could still use a
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boost?
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The vast majority of households with student loan debt are, you know, families making less than one
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hundred thousand dollars. So it's true that there are some folks who would benefit who are higher
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income. But what we would see is the vast majority of people who would really, truly
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benefit are low and middle income student loan borrowers.
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There have been several times in the history of this country where direct benefits have flown from
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the federal government to help people who are struggling or to help people go wealth, right?
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And land houses, education benefits, GI Bill, all of those
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things have happened before.
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This is not something new or unique that we are asking for is just something that will actually
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help so many people of color in a way that none of these other programs did.
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It's a very good investment.
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Sometimes the right way to finance a very good investment is through debt.
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That doesn't mean it should be excessive debt.
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That doesn't mean it should be to the point where it's placing such a heavy burden on people that
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they're unwilling to take it up.
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System itself is unsustainable.
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A debt financed model of higher education is unsustainable.
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But, you know, there's nothing wrong with small amounts of debt if those small amounts of debt are
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contributing to a quality education, that can provide them with the economic returns that
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college typically does.
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On the campaign trail, President Biden talked about debt cancelation.
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All we're asking is keep your promise.
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Hold up your end of the bargain.
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And this is important to so many communities, so many voters.
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Here's the thing:
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The student debt crisis isn't fair either.
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Low income students, middle income students and Black students have to borrow more money for the
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same education. That isn't fair.
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And student debt is one of the only types of debt that stays with you for life.
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That isn't fair either.
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So I think the question is less about is it fair?
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And rather, do we actually think student debt is the smartest way for us to fund our country's
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future? And that is still up for debate.