Despite failing to deliver his promise for broad student loan forgiveness, President Joe Biden has now overseen the cancellation of student loans for more than 5 million Americans — more than any other President in U.S. history.
In a last-minute action on Monday, the Education Department canceled loans for 150,000 borrowers through programs that existed before Biden took office. His administration expanded those programs and used them to their fullest extent, pressing on with cancellation even after the Supreme Court rejected Biden’s plan for a new forgiveness policy.
“My Administration has taken historic action to reduce the burden of student debt, hold bad actors accountable, and fight on behalf of students across the country,” Biden said in a written statement.
In total, the administration says it has waived $183.6 billion in student loans.
The wave of cancellation could dry up when President-elect Donald Trump takes office. Trump hasn’t detailed his student loan policies but previously called cancellation “vile” and illegal. Republicans have fought relentlessly against Biden’s plans, saying cancellation is ultimately shouldered by taxpayers who never attended college or already repaid their loans.
Biden loosened rules for debt forgiveness
The latest round of relief mostly comes through a program known as borrower defense, which allows students to get their loans canceled if they’re cheated or misled by their colleges. It was created in 1994 but rarely used until a wave of high-profile for-profit college scandals during the Barack Obama administration.
A smaller share of the relief came through a program for borrowers with disabilities and through Public Service Loan Forgiveness, which was created in 2007 and offers to erase all remaining debt for borrowers in a government or nonprofit job who make 10 years of monthly payments.
Most of Monday’s borrower defense cancellations were for students who attended several defunct colleges owned by Center for Excellence in Higher Education, including CollegeAmerica, Stevens-Henager College, and Independence University. They are based on past findings that the schools lied to prospective students about their employment prospects and the terms of private loans.
Before Biden took office, those programs were criticized by advocates who said complex rules made it difficult for borrowers to get relief. The Biden administration loosened some of the rules using its regulatory power, a maneuver that expanded eligibility without going through Congress.
As an example, just 7,000 borrowers had gotten their loans canceled through Public Service Loan Forgiveness before the Biden administration took office. Widespread confusion about eligibility, along with errors by loan servicers, resulted in a 99% rejection rate for applicants.
Huge numbers of borrowers made years of payments only to find out they were in an ineligible repayment plan. Some were improperly put into forbearance — a pause on payments — by their loan servicers. Those periods didn’t end up counting toward the 10 years of payments needed for cancellation.
The Biden administration temporarily relaxed the eligibility rules during the pandemic and then made it more permanent in 2023. As a result, more than 1 million public servants have now had their balances zeroed out through the program.
All those rule changes were meant to be a companion to Biden’s marquee policy for student debt, which proposed up to $20,000 in relief for more than 40 million Americans. But after the Supreme Court blocked the move, the Biden administration shifted its focus to maximizing relief through existing mechanisms.
Republicans have called for a different approach
Announcements of new cancellation became routine, even as conservatives in Congress accused Biden of overstepping his power. Republican states fought off Biden’s later attempts at mass forgiveness, but the smaller batches of relief continued without any major legal challenge.
As Republicans take hold of both chambers of Congress and the White House, Biden’s changes could be targeted for a rollback. But it’s unclear how far the next administration will go to tighten the cancellation spigot.
Trump proposed eliminating PSLF during his first term in office, but Congress rejected the idea. Project 2025, a blueprint created by the Heritage Foundation for a second Trump term, proposes ending PSLF, and narrowing borrower defense and making repayment plans less generous than existing ones.
Republicans have suggested that reversing Biden’s changes will be a priority. Earlier this month, U.S. Rep. Virginia Foxx, a North Carolina Republican, issued a report blasting Biden’s expansion of borrower defense, saying he “tried to stretch every possible law” to fulfill his campaign promises.
When Trump takes office, Foxx wrote, “the jig will finally be up.”
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Republished with permission of The Associated Press.
7 comments
rbruce
January 13, 2025 at 1:56 pm
Nothing is getting cancelled. The taxpayer must now pay the bill instead of the student.
Tricia
January 13, 2025 at 3:10 pm
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TruthBTold
January 13, 2025 at 2:08 pm
There is no loan “forgiveness”, the debt doesn’t just vanish. The debt is transferred to the taxpayer. Don’t lie to us, we see right through it and you lose what tiny bit of credibility you had.
JD
January 13, 2025 at 2:26 pm
Oh, bless your heart for that insight. You’re absolutely right. Debt doesn’t just “vanish.” It’s almost like that’s how every public program works: roads, schools, defense, disaster relief. Shocking, isn’t it? Someone, somewhere, always pays for it. Thanks for the economics lesson, Professors Obvious.
Let’s talk about “transferred to the taxpayer,” though. Are you out here campaigning against corporate bailouts, tax breaks for billionaires, or the trillions in national debt you’ve been “volunteering” to pay off your entire life? Or is your outrage conveniently limited to helping regular people get a leg up instead of being buried alive by interest payments?
And while we’re on the subject of “credibility,” it’s almost laughable to see someone point fingers at others for dishonesty while pretending their own taxes don’t already pay for things they’ll never directly benefit from. If it’s consistency and honesty you’re after, maybe try applying your logic across the board instead of just punching down. You want to head up the “welfare queens” look President Elect Musk.
But hey, thank you for the lecture. I’m sure your selfless crusade against “debt transfers” will really stick it to the multi-millionaire lobbyists writing actual tax policies. Bravo. 👏
Larry Gillis, Libertarian (Cape Coral)
January 13, 2025 at 2:42 pm
” … WAIVED $183.6 BILLION IN STUDENT LOANS …”
“Waived”, my foot. Don’t be so “Orwellian” in your choice of words.
The taxpayer picked up the tab here. Let’s call a spade a spade. Democrats BUY VOTERS with stunts like this. If this happened in the private sector, there’d be BRIBERY and THEFT indictments, for sure, but these are “legitimated” by Act of Congress authorizing them.
Larry Gillis, Libertarian (Cape Coral)
January 13, 2025 at 2:47 pm
(If Alexa’s math is right, that’s $565.50 per American?)
JD
January 13, 2025 at 4:02 pm
It’s more than Alexa’s calculation I think but I’d pay it to have an educated populace and in comparison, it is a bargin. The 164M number is the number of taxpayer returns in 2022 (the latest I could find).
————————————————————–
Cost per American Taxpayer for Major Federal Expenditures
————————————————————–
1. Military Spending
Formula: 886,000,000,000 / 164,997,000
Cost per taxpayer: $5,369.79
2. Infrastructure (Roads/Highways)
Formula: 185,000,000,000 / 164,997,000
Cost per taxpayer: $1,121.23
3. Healthcare (Medicare, Medicaid, etc.)
Formula: 1,400,000,000,000 / 164,997,000
Cost per taxpayer: $8,485.00
4. Student Loan Debt Forgiveness
Formula: 183,600,000,000 / 164,997,000
Cost per taxpayer: $1,112.75
————————————————————–
Observations:
– Student Loan Debt Forgiveness costs less per taxpayer than
military spending, healthcare, or even infrastructure.
– Perspective: Investing in education aligns with national
priorities at a relatively low cost.
————————————————————–