On May 1, 2022, which is just three months away, federal student loan payments will resume. This comes after a two-year period during which borrowers could choose whether or not they would make payments. As the date nears, the Biden administration is under pressure to make good on campaign promises to reduce student debt for millions of Americans with federal loans. Last week, 85 Democratic members of Congress sent the President a letter urging him to, “...direct the Department of Education to publicly release the memo outlining your legal authority to broadly cancel federal student loan debt and immediately cancel up to $50,000 of student loan debt per borrower.”
But it is still unclear how President Biden will move forward. During his campaign, he promised to forgive up to $10,000 per student loan borrower, but he has since expressed hesitancy to extend loan forgiveness to those attending elite schools or who obtained professional graduate degrees, and have strong repayment prospects. In a press conference last month, President Biden declined to comment on a question about student loan forgiveness.
An article in the Wall Street Journal speculates that the Biden Administration may opt to forego blanket debt forgiveness for an alternative path, “...by starting a regulatory process, complete with input from stakeholders, to set up a debt-forgiveness program that targets people most in need.” This path may allow the administration to avoid a potential Supreme Court battle that an Executive Action may spur.
In the meantime, the administration has moved forward with more targeted loan-relief initiatives, such as a revamp of the long-standing Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF) program. This would allow those who have worked for a public or nonprofit organization, and also made monthly payments for a ten-year period (120 payments) to have their loans forgiven. A revamp is exciting for current business, medical, and law students who wish to go into public service, and necessary. The original program, which dates back to 2007, burdened participants with bureaucratic hurdles, and only provided benefits to a small percentage, about 16,000 out of 1.3 million.