Repaye

January 11, 2023

The Biden administration has released a new student loan repayment plan that is expected to make college "more affordable and manageable than ever before." Here's everything you need to know: What are the details of the plan? The Department of Education (DOE) called the new plan a "student loan safety net" that prevents borrowers from being overwhelmed by debt, per The Associated Press. It revises one of the current income-driven payment plans known as REPAYE, where monthly payments are determined by the borrower's income and then the remaining loan is forgiven after 20 years. The Education Department's updated plan would make the process more forgiving, The New York Times explains. First, undergraduate loan payments would be reduced to 5 percent of discretionary income, compared to 10 percent in the old REPAYE plan. Discretionary income is the amount of money left over after paying expenses. Graduate loan debt would be set at 10 percent of discretionary income, but if you have both, it would be weighted.  Low-income borrowers might also be eligible for $0 monthly payments if they are not making 225 percent of the federal poverty level. "That means a single borrower earning less than $30,500 a year and a borrower in a family of four making less than $62,400 would not be required to make monthly payments on their loans," The Washington Post reports. Additionally, those who took out smaller loans would also have their debt forgiven in 10 years, rather than in 20 years. The biggest change is that the borrower's loan balance would not increase over time, even if they currently are not making payments.  It is not yet clear when the new plan would be implemented.  What kind of savings would you see? The most significant savings would go to those with undergraduate debt, since their monthly payments would be reduced. "These proposed regulations will cut monthly payments for undergraduate borrowers in half and create faster pathways to forgiveness, so borrowers can better manage repayment, avoid delinquency and default, and focus on building brighter futures for themselves and their families," said Education Secretary Miguel Cardona. Also, low-income borrowers would pay an average of "83 percent lower per dollar borrowed over their lifetimes," writes the Times. High-income earners would see a 5 percent decrease in payments. "We are, for the first time, creating a true student-loan safety net in this country," Undersecretary of Education James Kvaal told reporters.  What are the criticisms of the program? The Office of Federal Student Aid (FSA) has been vocal about the pressure it would face implementing the new plan. The FSA and DOE "must now safeguard priorities ... while also scrambling to find hundreds of millions of dollars to cut from other current and future programs," according to NPR. This is because Congress' omnibus spending bill did not allocate enough for the FSA to fulfill everything on its agenda. In 2022, the FSA had a budget of $2 billion; in the original 2023 budget proposal, the Biden administration wanted to raise the budget to $2.65 billion. Republicans counteroffered with a 20 percent increase for the FSA, which was lower than what the administration wanted, but still an increase. "There was a proposal put forward to the White House to say, 'Listen, we'll give you an extra couple hundred million dollars here, in order to focus on improvements … for the student loan program,'" a source told NPR. "But that came with a tradeoff." The tradeoff was that none of the funding could go to Biden's loan relief program. In turn, the Senate version of the bill provided "no new funding for the implementation of the Biden administration's student loan forgiveness plan." Democrats did not want an exception like that specifically noted, and rejected the proposal. Republicans "refused to agree to additional money for FSA without a debt relief exception," explains NPR. As a result, the agency received the same budget as last year, with more agenda items to cover.  Another concern is that the debt relief program will subsidize predatory schools "because borrowers with the lowest earnings — perhaps because they graduated from, or left, poor-performing programs — receive some of the biggest benefits," MarketWatch explains. As Kvaal echoed, "It's time to name names about these programs and have a frank conversation about the root causes of student debt."

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