During his term as president, Joe Biden has used various programs to cancel $175 billion in student debt for nearly 5 million borrowers. Those efforts will likely fizzle out over the next four years.
Two of Biden’s key debt-relief initiatives are tied up in court: his SAVE income-driven repayment plan, intended to make student-loan payments cheaper for borrowers, and his broader loan forgiveness plan, set to benefit over 30 million borrowers.
Millions of federal borrowers remain in limbo as they wait for court decisions, and even if the plans do survive the courts, President-elect Donald Trump is unlikely to prioritize either the broad or the incremental relief efforts that Biden planned to implement.
“The Biden administration has taken a stance of, ‘We want to try and forgive as much debt as possible through various different programs,'” Preston Cooper, a senior fellow at the conservative-leaning American Enterprise Institute, told Business Insider. “And to put it mildly, we’re not going to see that same attitude under the Trump administration.”
Trump has offered minimal detail on his student loan plans once he takes office. However, he has criticized broad student-loan forgiveness and ran up backlogs processing student-debt cancellation applications for key programs during his first term. Some higher education experts said borrowers can expect targeted relief and cheaper payments through SAVE to cease under Trump, and GOP control over Congress and the White House could enable that to happen quicker.
Jared Bass, the senior vice president for education at the left-leaning Center for American Progress, told BI that Trump’s administration “will not be as kind to student-loan borrowers.”
Read more here from Business Insider.