video<\/span> <\/p>\nPenn Wharton director warns Biden student loan plan will be \u2018positive on inflation\u2019<\/h2>\n
Penn Wharton Budget Model faculty director Kent Smetters says Biden\u2019s student loan handouts, worth more than $300 billion in taxpayer money, will be spaced out over several years.<\/p>\n
President Biden on Wednesday announced plans to cancel student loan debt for millions of borrowers nationwide, but the relief effort could ultimately exacerbate the ongoing inflation crisis, according to a new analysis.<\/p>\n
The Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget (CRFB), a nonprofit based in Washington, argued that Biden's executive order — which will wipe out $10,000 in debt for borrowers earning less than $125,000 and $20,000 for Pell grant recipients — could inflame inflation, which is already hovering near a four-decade high.<\/p>\n
"This announcement is gallingly reckless, with the national debt approaching record levels and inflation surging, it will make both worse," said Maya MacGuineas, CRFB president. "Policymakers have already spent $300 billion on student debt relief — none of it paid for — and this would add another $400 to $600 billion, again, none of it paid for."<\/p>\n
The White House<\/u> has weighed for months whether to cancel some federal student loan debt. Biden campaigned on erasing at least $10,000 in student loan debt for most borrowers and has since floated income-based parameters that would cut off forgiveness for any household earning more than $125,000.<\/p>\n
BIDEN SAYS RESUMING STUDENT LOAN PAYMENTS WILL PREVENT HANDOUT FROM HAVING A 'MEANINGFUL IMPACT ON INFLATION'<\/strong><\/p>\n