Hacker Read top | best | new | newcomments | leaders | about | bookmarklet login
Supreme Court Rejects Student Loan Forgiveness Plan (www.nytimes.com) similar stories update story
93 points by iamsanteri | karma 749 | avg karma 3.37 2023-06-30 10:05:36 | hide | past | favorite | 335 comments



view as:

[flagged]

[flagged]

Yes indeed. Like would you like the heated pan or the actual fire? /s

Unless you fall into protected categories such as "business owner" or "bank"

[flagged]

2 million folks (ie voters) over the age of 55 die every year, and 4 million young folks age into voting every year. I find it questionable if this idea can withstand the eventual tipping point when younger cohorts are tired of subsidizing the folks who pulled the ladder up behind them (housing, healthcare, wages that don't keep up and tenuous unemployment, requiring degrees that require debt with no assurance of a job after, safety nets that may be substantially impaired by the time they qualify for them). These young folks (top of Gen Z cohort is ~26 currently) are not why the national debt clock ticks where it does (~$32.25T as of this comment).

These geritocracy and conservative decisions will eventually catch up. As I tell my father, "be kind, I will be the one to pick your nursing home." The numbers are very clear who wins when young people actually turn out, so this just adds fuel to the fire.

(bit of a demographics scholar when time permits)


Or, education should be free, full stop, and it should be okay to change things to make that true for as many people as possible.

Is one way of taking responsibility not voting for people who will resolve a problem in exchange for taxes?

Is there actually a problem though?

Affordable education exists. You can get a bachelor's in Computer Science from WGU for a couple thousand. Georgia Tech offers an online MSCS for about $1k per month.

These programs are scalable and practical. They have such high capacities that they don't have to be selective, making them available to everyone. The cost is trivial compared to the potential earnings.

But for this type of education reform to work, people need to vote with their wallets for the most affordable option. That's only going to happen if they are held personally accountable for their education spending.

Why would somebody choose an affordable, practical program over a needlessly expensive program if the government is paying for it? Where is the incentive to minimize cost and maximize ROI?


The debts are huge, but forgiving them is not the answer. If the debt is so toxic, why is the US government still creating new loans that are just as big or even larger? And why are the colleges still forcing their students into the same debt?

The right solution would be to halt the lending entirely.


Why not both? Damage has already been done and hurt a bunch of people, but student loan reform is also needed.

Although not sure about halting it entirely. Imposing price limits on tuition and/or loans should be sufficient.


We should do both. However, the Dem leadership are not interested in doing both, they only want the quick and easy win (which turned out to be neither).

The right solution in my opinion would be to nationalize the universities and end this predatory nonsense.

That doesn't help the people who are already hurting by this though.

It's the same idea as the PPP loans -- for people who are struggling to make payments, this would have been incredibly helpful.

It's two separate issues.


Helping the people who are hurting is profoundly unfair to the people who spent within their means. I know plenty of people who didn't go to a fancy college because they couldn't afford them. Mercy to the free spending debtors is also an insult to the careful ones who kept within their budget.

I don't think stopping lending is the answer. Stopping government guaranteed loans and undischargable debt is a better answer. I have no issue with private lending.

The guaranteed loans skew the market. They are a big banner to schools saying the government will pay you with tax dollars if you can get the loan qualifying kids to register. And, that is exactly what they did.


Schools should have some skin in the game. If one of their former students defaults (regardless of whether they graduated or not) then the school should have to eat part of the cost. This would help to hold down tuition, and force them to be more responsible about admitting students who are unlikely to succeed.

The government should not be forgiving any debt taken on by anybody. The attempt to do so was blatantly buying votes.

You were responsible and paid off your debt. Taking on unsustainable debt is a choice. It was not forced on anybody. Why do you think that the government should absolve responsibility of other debt holders?


Now let's do PPP loans.

They are not comparable.

PPP loans came about because the government interfered with the economy, forcing businesses to close at gun point in many states.

In addition, the PPP loans are written into law by Congress. Congress controls money, not the executive branch.

I don't recall being compelled at gunpoint to get a degree. It was a voluntary decision.


They are comparable, the number of PPP loans taken out and not used for the intended purpose is quite high, and there is massive fraud, yet those are forgiven. Everyone is arguing in circles on this or speaking past each other. The HEROES Act allowed for modifying loan terms. Regardless, PPP loans should not have been forgiven as they where without following the law Congress passed. So, now, let's do PPP loans.

> They are comparable, the number of PPP loans taken out and not used for the intended purpose is quite high, and there is massive fraud, yet those are forgiven.

You're conflating forgiveness with fraud. The Small Business Administration, FBI, DoJ, and IRS are all investigating fraudulent loans.

> Everyone is arguing in circles on this or speaking past each other. The HEROES Act allowed for modifying loan terms.

The HEROES Act was passed by Congress. Congress can do whatever it wants with those tax dollars because they controls taxes, not the executive branch.

> Regardless, PPP loans should not have been forgiven as they where without following the law Congress passed. So, now, let's do PPP loans.

"Should not" is your opinion. And again, Congress can do whatever it wants with those tax dollars.

It seems like your position is Congress should do something about student loans, but lack a convincing argument to persuade the electorate and Congress.


The government is constantly forgiving debts. What are you talking about?

Why do you assume parent isn't against the government forgiving debts those other times?

I don't think it's an unreasonable idea - we should rethink the role of higher education in society and/or provide aid to people that got tricked into taking out loans.

But this is a constitutional issue. It needs to be run by Congress.


I seem to recall that this affects something like 20 million student voters. And lots of them have swayable parent and sibling voters. If I were the Democrats, I'd definitely be leveraging the heck out of this decision next election.

Personally, I don't think forgiveness is worth much without structural changes behind it. It's just a one-off bailing effort while ignoring the gaping hole in the hull. Roll tuition back to 1980 levels (inflation adjusted), as well.


What I don't understand is why the Republicans don't just respond by supporting student debt cancellation combined with a tax on university endowments. The obstinate "pay back your debts" position is such an obvious political loser for them that turns out voters against them and also prevents people from buying homes and having children (things that, statistically speaking, make people more conservative). Taxing the universities would solve the "it costs too much" problem and would tax an entity that conservatives see as an enemy. They could even combine it with the DeSantis campaign's proposal to make universities responsible for defaulted debt[0].

I think part of it is that the Republican Party is largely dominated by elderly people who aren't aware just how exorbitant the cost of college is these days because it wasn't when they were young. You don't see the same hostility to Biden's student debt relief proposal or obsession with tax cuts for the wealthy among younger Republicans whose concerns tend to be more about what's happening in the culture (the "parents rights" messaging clearly isn't targeted towards elderly conservatives who presumably don't have children in K-12 school).

[0]: https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/news/campaigns/desantis-p...


Fascinating. Can you cite a link from the Conservative Council of Evil Affairs website? I'm sure they've got "we're evil and hate you" in the mission statement somewhere.

> hope students and former students don’t forget this in 2024

To be fair, the Congress could have enabled this via statute during its Democrat-controlled phase. But it didn't, so a legally-dubious administrative fix was attempted. This issue is likely to be as spicy at the primary level as it will be in the general.


The broad authority was already approved by Congress in statute.

> broad authority was already approved by Congress in statute

No, it wasn't, at least not clearly. The statute the Secretary of Education relied on is the HEROES Act of 2003, which lets them "waive or modify." It's a novel reading of that statute (and its intent) to say it permits large-scale forgiveness. (It's not textually inappropriate, hence the grey area.)


I mean, waiving student loans is exactly the authority you've quoted there. Forgiveness is simply a synonym for fully exercising that provision in this case.

> waiving student loans is exactly the authority you've quoted there

At the time the HEROES Act was passed, forgiveness was separately considered by the Education Act. (For example, "bankrupt borrowers may have their loans forgiven.") There is the added complication that it's not a straightforward waiver of statute, but, due to the income qualification, a writing of provisions anew.

Based on my reading, saying student loans will be automatically forgiven in bankruptcy as well as increasing the number of professions considered "public servants" seems the savvier way to go.


> At the time the HEROES Act was passed, forgiveness was separately considered by the Education Act. (For example, "bankrupt borrowers may have their loans forgiven.")

That separate bill adds other authorities but doesn't restrict the ability to waive or modify during a national emergency. The heroes act of 2003 makes no reference to bankruptcy. https://www.congress.gov/108/plaws/publ76/PLAW-108publ76.pdf

> There is the added complication that it's not a straightforward waiver of statute, but, due to the income qualification, a writing of provisions anew.

Waive and modify.

> Based on my reading, saying student loans will be automatically forgiven in bankruptcy as well as increasing the number of professions considered "public servants" seems the savvier way to go.

What test did you use to come to that being the limit of the powers here (or near)?


> What test did you use to come to that being the limit of the powers here (or near)?

Not limit. That’s safely within the scope the opinion finds.


It says "[the Secretary] may waive or modify any statutory or regulatory provision applicable to the student financial assistance programs under title IV of the [Education Act] as the Secretary deems necessary in connection with a war or other military operation or national emergency."

So "waive or modify" refers to a regulatory provision of the loans, not the loans themselves. This makes it far less convincing that Congress intended for the loans themselves to be waived.


I think the Loan Forgiveness Plan as planned was just a very expensive stunt that fixed nothing. Instead they should work on reducing education cost (or at least limiting future growth). Otherwise it's just a straight subsidy for schools that will keep raising tuition. Same for health care. The government shouldn't run even bigger deficits to subsidize schools and hospitals without controlling their cost.

You have to admit, dressing up a giant pile of money to schools this way was an incredibly shrewd political move. Even now that the plan has been blocked, that won't reflect badly on the administration which made the plan, it will just focus anger towards conservatives and the SCOTUS.

This was something with no political downside.


that's an astute observation. i think the current administration designed this legislation for maximum airtime by trying to go all-in on debt forgiveness, without any conviction about whether it could actually withstand challenge.

if they were interested in actually helping the disadvantaged, then there are plenty of workarounds, like forgiving the interest and fees on student loans rather than forgiving principal. this would be more impervious to the idea that the executive branch was trying to wholesale rewrite legislation, rather than tweaking it on the margin, which was part of the court's rationale in this case.


What a joke, we just wasted 2 years on an empty promise that was doomed to fail from the start and now all the people who have been waiting and suffering are getting nothing. All we get now is a blame-game of finger-pointing instead of any solutions. We got teased and led on for years. There is no alternative plan to the one proposed, all eggs in one basket on such a monumentally important issue.

What a great victory!


Welcome to politics, empty promises to the gullible have been a mainstay for thousands of years.

How have they been suffering, when loan payments have been paused this whole time?

"All we get now is a blame-game of finger-pointing instead of any solutions. "

That's how modern US politics works. They have given up on actually solving problems a long time ago. And people are stupid enough to buy into this nonsense.


Even a cursory study of human history reveals that this is how politics usually works, and always has. People are fundamentally the same as we've been for thousands of years, so the means to manipulate us are fundamentally similar.

> There is no alternative plan

That doesn't seem to be accurate: a new debt relief regulatory effort was initiated today, plus a repayment “on ramp” that limits the impact of ending the pause, plus a new income-based time-limited repayment program that will have low income borrowers paying $0. (The last of which was, IIRC, announced in principal around the same time as the forgiveness program, but not finalized in detail.)

https://www.ed.gov/news/press-releases/secretary-cardona-sta...

Regulatory notice on the first part is here:

https://www2.ed.gov/policy/highered/reg/hearulemaking/2023/n...


> that won't reflect badly on the administration

I will agree if we define the audience as “the masses”. If, on the other hand, we consider the subset of people who actually engage in critical thinking, things should be different.

This was a political stunt to gain votes. And, as you seem to suggest, it will still be used as yet another us-vs-them wedge tool used to divide and polarize the population.

What’s outrageous is that the cost of university education has been inflated precisely due to government involvement through guarantees.

Everyone should be horrified that 17 year olds are agreeing to loans in the $150K to $300K range (and more). And sometimes this is for degrees that will never lead to high income jobs. I saw this piece a while back on this 32 year old with some kind of a sociology degree that cost her $250K. She was making $60K a year, with no real prospects to do significantly better.

My guess is that a reasonable cost for a degree is in a range similar to the cost of cars. The idea being to be able to pay it off in 5 to 7 years at the average earning potential for the corresponding degree. That might mean $20K to $150K max. For example, a CS undergrad degree should probably be in the $20K to $50K range.

The only way that happens is in a market where government isn’t in the student loan business.


> I will agree if we define the audience as “the masses”. If, on the other hand, we consider the subset of people who actually engage in critical thinking, things should be different.

To be clear, that's a tiny minority which rarely impacts the outcomes of elections, and elections are what matter to politicians.


Yup, that’s true.

Dark Brandon is running circles around an opposition that paints him as senile.

Exactly! The problem here is the predatory nature of student loans. A bit of forgiveness to them is a band aid that will do nothing to prevent the problem from just happening again.

Personally, I think the cost of college should be capped, and in addition all forms of student loans should be outright banned, which should force the education industry to cut itself back to a reasonable amount of spending.


It fixes a lot for the people struggling with them right now.

We need to solve the bigger issue too, but that shouldn't preclude shorter term action to correct past mistakes.


Except it was rejected, so it didn't fix anything for anyone. It just wasted a bunch of time (it was doomed to fail from the start) and tricked people into thinking something was being done.

Aka, politics as usual.


That’s patently untrue. We saved tens of thousands of dollars in the interest pause alone.

> That’s patently untrue. We saved tens of thousands of dollars in the interest pause alone.

The interest/payments pause is not the same thing as the student loan forgiveness plan. They're entirely different things.


Sure, but I know that YOU know that people talk about these items together. The general tone of this convo has been that nothing helpful has come from these actions, and that’s not true. It’s been stated it was all politics, and we know that’s not fair, as some good has happened as a result.

Now, if we’re going to argue about the very specific loan forgiveness being effective, then sure, it has been currently struck down. But I have trouble believing that nothing good has come from it, if only by forcing this convo, and convos like these taking place.

Sometimes you have to do something loud to get people’s attention; it certainly got yours.


> Sure, but I know that YOU know that people talk about these items together.

If I know anything, it's that "people" are often simply wrong about stuff. If a bunch of people wrongly thing two different things are the same, that doesn't make it so.

> The general tone of this convo has been that nothing helpful has come from these actions, and that’s not true.

I don't care about the general tone, I was only responding to the statement that A "did" good because different-thing B "did good."

My understanding is this thread is specifically about the student loan forgiveness plan that was just ruled unconstitutional, not some amorphous larger thing (which may be how you personally think about it).


I don’t know what more to say, so please read this and get back to me. Research shows this would actually be a good thing

https://www.levyinstitute.org/pubs/rpr_2_6.pdf


You've written at least half a dozen comments linking to this study and claiming that it disputes everyone's opposition to the student loan cancellation plan. I'm skeptical that you've even read it. I just did. It says that the cancelation will not raise the deficit as much as naively would be expected (but will raise it some) because of the general economic benefits that will come from the people spending money on things other than student loan payments.

It doesn't say anything about the moral hazard of paying off student loans for those who haven't paid them, while ignoring those who have. Or about the likelihood that a student loan cancelation will need to happen again. Or that those two things together will encourage people not to pay their student loans in the future, hoping for another cancelation. Or that universities will be able to raise prices even more because they expect further cancellations.

Sure, the deficit may not go up as much as naively you'd expect it to. And we won't have to pay it off with taxes immediately. (we'll just have more debt instead). But you seem to not care about all of the reasons that people oppose this, and just throw a pdf in their face, hoping it'll shut them up even when it doesn't argue what you want it to argue. Please stop.


The interest rate pause and the loan forgiveness are different policies - one can exist without the other.

The interest rate pause was not declared unconstitutional today - and it will continue until the loans are scheduled to be started again in the next couple months.


Technically, but one does not exist without the other in its current implementation. Hence the continuation shortly as this forgiveness was struck down.

I don’t understand. The two policies were begun by different administrations. The pause did exist without the forgiveness policy; it was done first.

The pause will continue until September (it was not effected at all by this ruling) so it once again exists without the forgiveness policy.

Why do you think one cannot exist without the other? The pause is fine with or without the forgiveness, and the pause existing didn’t save the forgiveness.


The pause can also no longer be extended due to Congressional action:

> Congress recently passed a law preventing further extensions of the payment pause. Student loan interest will resume starting on Sept. 1, 2023, and payments will be due starting in October. We will notify borrowers well before payments restart.

Source: https://studentaid.gov/announcements-events/covid-19/payment...


Sometimes band-aid solutions mess up the incentives to fix underlying problems. Personally, I think this is one of those times. It's like the debt ceiling thing; once you set the precedent that a problem can be "solved" by kicking it down the road until after the next election, there is essentially no incentive for anybody to ever fix it for real.

This is not a problem that is going to be solved by injecting more unaccountable government cash into the system. Students would just take on more debt, expecting more forgiveness, and schools would thus simply continue raising prices. Why would anybody do anything differently?


I dont even know where to start with this. How many times do we all have to have this same conversation. “Student loans being forgiven does not increase inflation, as no new money is being injected into the economy”. It’s either spent before being collected, or spent after being collected by the gov”.

Guys, seriously, we’re not talking about people taking loans out to do blow and hookers, they’re trying to get an education. You’re all acting like we’re just going to give out forgiveness and then throw our hands up and doing nothing after that.


I'm not sure you responded to the right comment here? I didn't say any of the stuff you seem to be responding to.

Maybe you're responding to what I said about unaccountable government cash? But you seem to be thinking I'm saying it's the students who lack accountability and whose incentives are screwed up by the government cash?

That's not it at all, it's not the students' incentives that are a mess under the current system and an even worse mess under the perpetual forgiveness system. It is schools whose incentives are messed up. They have no reason to keep from raising tuition and fees indefinitely because they are guaranteed to be paid. It's that problem that setting a precedent for forgiveness makes worse.

It has nothing to do with what people with student debt spend their money on.


Then nationalize the schools like every other major OEDC nation. This isn’t rocket science. I swear this country sometimes.

That's one potential solution, I'm not against it a priori, but would be interested in the exact details of it.

But it is not the only potential solution.

But the availability of other actual potential solutions does not make the non-solution of one-time blanket forgiveness that we're discussing here any more appealing to me.


Here’s some research that supports it

https://www.levyinstitute.org/pubs/rpr_2_6.pdf


Supports what? That paper seems to be narrowly about the economic impact of loan forgiveness, not about nationalizing higher education or about other potential solutions to the causes of student debt.

Pardon, this was deeper linked, but your previous comments describe the overall forgiveness as a bandaid, or generally not helpful. That is not supported by the research.

I do think it is a bandaid and generally not helpful, even if it is not economically damaging. Economic benefit or damage is only one aspect of the question.

This is why this country will always be crabs in a bucket

Why? Because a lot of people don't support counter-productive band-aids and would rather advocate for policies that solve actual problems? That doesn't seem like our issue to me...

The USA has public schools; what do you want?

College, Education, training, viewing people as our greatest assists. This is America, we can do it

Our public colleges are essentially privately funded at this point. The amount of public funding in most states (with a small number of notable exceptions) is very small.

What you are describing is called "moral hazard". When the incentives of a program or law encourage more bad behavior by removing risk it is a moral hazard.

Don't worry, sugar daddy government's got your back Jack.


Also, "perverse incentives".

More often than not, politics is about optics, not solutions. This was doomed to fail from the beginning and I bet they knew it. Status quo continues, crisis remains, talking points for the next election cycle established. Sorry guys, we couldn't get it through this time, but next time, trust us, we'll succeed.

> More often than not, politics is about optics, not solutions. This was doomed to fail from the beginning and I bet they knew it. Status quo continues, crisis remains, talking points for the next election cycle established. Sorry guys, we couldn't get it through this time, but next time, trust us, we'll succeed.

Also points scored in the last election. IIRC, this plan was announced a single month before the 2022 election. They got to benefit from the votes of people who thought they were getting their loans forgiven, without ever actually doing that.


Only because the plan was opposed on equally political grounds. The idea was a welcomed one by the people who voted for the politicians in favor of it, and not welcomed by the ones they didn't vote for, so the points went where they belonged.

If it was so certain that they had no intention of going through with it, why not call their bluff and turn the responsibility for killing it back on them?


> If it was so certain that they had no intention of going through with it, why not call their bluff and turn the responsibility for killing it back on them?

That's the wrong question. It was never if they had "intention of going through with it," it was about if they would be able to actually pull it off. The GGP stated "This was doomed to fail from the beginning and I bet they knew it," and I have to agree. Their plan to push this through purely via executive action was very likely to fail (and did), and the lawyers and politicians who formulated almost certainly knew the odds.


It failed due to the GOP, which didn’t exactly vote favorably on any measures related to this when they did have a chance.

Do you REALLY think an executive order had any chance of succeeding? Think about it for a minute. You think the SC would be ok with the president having the ability to forgive loans on a whim?

Did you look at how the house and senate voted on these matters?

I don't know why this would be doomed, other than the Supreme Court is already considered too politically biased.

The legal analysis at the time of its passage certainly thought there was a strong legal argument for it to be allowed.


I'd love to know more about the strong legal argument. It seems pretty obvious to me that the SC wouldn't be ok with the president having the ability to just erase debt like this.

If it's just about people struggling with their finances today, why not forgive any type of debt? Money is fungible after all. Suppose a grad has a net debt because they routinely spend more than they earn and like to go on all inclusive destination vacations every year. Now suppose you have someone who didn't take out student loans but had some unfortunate life circumstances that caused them to be in the same amount of debt.

Forgiving either person's debt will improve each one's finances, but won't affect whether they've gone to college in the past.

Edit: in case it wasn't obvious, the question is rhetorical. I'm not advocating for forgiving any kind of debt.


[flagged]

You realize that many people with student loans are no longer students, right?

[flagged]

Because much of student debt is federally owned and they have the authority to forgive it, while they don't have the authority to force Visa to forgive someone's credit card debt that was incurred due to unfortunate life circumstances.

It'd be fair to ask why student debt vs other kinds of federally held debt, but why notmall debt is pretty clear.


The federal government could do this in the form of a check in the mail once you provide your credit card statement. For the purposes of the argument, I don't see why it would matter if the individual actually uses it to pay the debt or not. It has the same affect on their ability to cope with the struggle that parent poster was referring to, and it costs the same to the taxpayer. (Although, I'm sure that they could make some kind of law to accomplish this.)

But this is going into the weeds and not really addressing the point of the argument.


> why not forgive any type of debt?

You can already do that with bankruptcy, but it specifically does not apply for student loans


There are long lasting negative repercussions of going into bankruptcy.

Yes

I'm sorry. I assumed you were trying to make a counterpoint and not simply naming factual information. When I asked, "why not forgive any type of debt," I was making a point about how there's no reason we would judge either debt to be more worthy of forgiveness if we accept parent poster's claim that this was just about peoples' present-day financial struggle.

Bankruptcy is very different than student loan forgiveness. For example, 91% of people hire an attorney to do the bankruptcy, there are court fees, you take a huge hit on your credit score, you can't get credit, you either get put on a payment plan or you have to liquidate your assets, etc. Compared to that, student loan forgiveness is basically a freebie. When I asked, "why not forgive any type of debt," I meant it in the same kind of way that student loan forgiveness works.


> I'm sorry. I assumed you were trying to make a counterpoint and not simply naming factual information.

You are the one telling me bankruptcy has consequences

The point is school debt is specifically excluded from bankruptcy by law so people have no recourse

You ask why not forgive all debts, and my response is we don’t need to do that, if debt is enough of a burden people can file bankruptcy

Yes, there are consequences and people have to make that choice

There is no choice for student loan debt, hence forgiveness

You can’t have it both ways - there has to be an out


Then the question would become: why should the system give such harsh repercussions for those who must file bankruptcy while those who get student loan forgiveness have no repercussions? What's more: those who get student loan forgiveness are much more likely to have a degree and have a higher income. In addition, student loan forgiveness applies to everyone with the debt, not just those who are in financial distress.

> It fixes a lot for the people struggling with them right now.

> We need to solve the bigger issue too, but that shouldn't preclude shorter term action to correct past mistakes.

But this plan stretched the law past its breaking point, which why it was struck down. IIRC, the plan would have been OK if Congress had only passed a law explicitly granting the authority to forgive the loans, which it didn't even when Democrats controlled Congress.

IMHO, They'd fix the student loan issue immediately if Congress passed a law to allow the debt be discharged in bankruptcy (but maybe with some kind of delay or different fix to prevent the previous abuses of bankruptcy that led to the current regime), and perhaps added a claw-back from the schools for future government loans.


[flagged]

Prove it. Sans evidence this is nothing but an attempt to paint the Supreme Court in a negative light simply for disagreeing with you. The last three decisions of the Supreme court have been absolutely in line with the Constitution. If you don't like it, convince the rest of us to change the Constitution.

I feel like the Supreme Court is finally doing its job holding the legislative and executive branches to their granted authority.


Disagree, this is a lot of word salad to justify not helping people.

> Disagree, this is a lot of word salad to justify not helping people.

Come on. It's not no "unintelligible, extremely disorganized speech or writing manifested as a symptom of a mental disorder" to disagree with you.

Furthermore, framing this as just about "not helping people" is simple-minded. There are almost always trade-offs between different goods, and maintaining separation of powers is an important good as well. There are serious, serious problems with allowing small provisions of law meant to solve small problems to be re-interpreted to allow the executive to unilaterally make massive policy changes.


You’re the one approaching this like it’s some incredibly complex issue, it’s really not. But okay, let’s play your game. Describe the real material harm caused by this forgiveness. Is it inflation? There’s a lot of research saying that’s bogus. Is it an overstretching of powers? Seems pretty minimal compared to existing powers, and it seems like this is right up the executive and DOE alley… what exactly are you upset with in the real tangible sense? What concrete harms are happening that are backed by data and not just a myopic world view? Please, really, enlighten me

The president cannot seize your assets in order to buy malaria nets for Kenya, even though that would "help people".

I’m having trouble seeing how student loan forgiveness and this are equivalent. Can you elaborate?

There wasn’t really a legal basis for striking this down, because the plaintiffs did not actually suffer damage.

Same for the discrimination case where the plaintiffs had neither suffered damage, nor prior restraint, nor were actually engaged in the line of business in which they claimed to be.

The court is now accepting purely hypothetical cases when it’s convenient for them - this was someone who might start a web business and might suffer adverse action. The action that might be punished hasn’t even occurred yet, let alone any governmental response, nor is their even any bona fide movement towards the action that might be restrained, let alone any indication the government might restrain it.

It’s extremely damaging to our legal fabric to have this double-standard applied across the system. This is calvinball territory, the court is changing the rules of the game for different participants. Different people get an entirely different process based on which group you fall into, and the process difference is so drastic it effectively determines the outcome of the case.


Can’t until the republicans are voted out

> IMHO, They'd fix the student loan issue immediately if Congress passed a law to allow the debt be discharged in bankruptcy

The law already allows the debt to be discharged in bankruptcy, though it sets more difficult terms than for debt generally.


How were they supposed to pass the law with the filibuster?

"We shouldn't give starving people food, instead we should embark on a multi-decade effort to reform farming so that food prices will begin to decline in the late 2030s".

There are multiple ways to attack and ease the problem, its not an either/or approach. We could help people now, while tackling the long term issues.


Details matter. It's not a good analogy.

I definitely support the development of a policy designed to attack the short term problem of untenable student debt (to the extent there is a problem... I think income based repayment is already a good policy targeting this), while also targeting the underlying causes of the student debt situation.

But this forgiveness policy was not that. It was a half-assed political gesture toward a campaign promise that the administration never seriously thought was going to solve any problems.

They picked their legislative priorities intentionally (pandemic recovery, infrastructure, and climate), and explicitly chose not to include this one.


[flagged]

Seems like a good analogy to me

You realize we can do both right? Forgive the loans AND tackle the rising cost of tuition by nationalizing? I swear it’s this same myopic response everyone, no one can ever imagine there’s a step two.

Forgiving the loans makes any other legislative solution vanishingly unlikely. Politicians love to just kick cans down the road. Forgiving student loans at the beginning of every new administration would be much easier than pursuing an actual policy to attack the problem legislatively.

I honestly don’t know what to say to this. If the meat of your argument is “they’ll never do the right thing, they’ll just keep stalling “, it kinda feels like you just don’t have faith in our government at all. In which case there’s nothing I can do to convince you otherwise.

That isn't the meat of my argument. I think it is much more likely that they'll come up with new legislation that is actually targeted at the problem, if they don't just forgive the debt. I think people are more likely to do the democracy stuff - voting for and influencing representatives who have plans to fix this - if they still see it as a problem to be solved, rather than something that doesn't affect them due to their debt having been forgiven already.

I'm not sure how one thinks "actually targeting the problem" will be easier than forgiving loans. What do you think would actually fix the problem? Because, I think it would require a large subsidized, if not nationalized, public university system with free tuition or near-free tuition. And that's a much bigger task than forgiving loans.

I don't think it will be easier! But I don't think forgiving the loans is harmless, I think it makes the problem worse. So I don't support doing an easier thing that makes the problem both worse and also even harder politically to solve than it already was.

I think there are a number of policies to consider, all the way from beefing up the current programs - like income based repayment, public service forgiveness, and grants - to regulatory price controls, to your idea of nationalizing essentially the current system, to rethinking the whole concept of what college is for and who should go.

There are a bunch of different things I might support depending on the details, but just "I dunno, do a one time blanket forgiveness and nothing else I guess?" really ain't it.


I’m flabbergasted at the reasoning here, I see it the exact opposite. Give people breathing room and then they’ll be able to do the democracy stuff.

(Aside: You've started every reply you've written to me with some sort of "I don't even know what to say" or "I'm flabbergasted". I'm not sure if this is just a rhetorical tick you have, or if it means that maybe you should sit with what you've read for a bit and think it over until you know what to say or are no longer flabbergasted by it. I don't find what you're saying flabbergasting, I just disagree. I think you could perhaps reach a similar place with what I'm saying if you take some time to think about it.)

People don't need "breathing room" to care about a political issue. People care about issues that are affecting them. You clearly care about this issue because (from your comments today) it is clearly affecting you. You aren't going to suddenly care more about whether college administrators are or aren't incentivized to raise the costs of college after you've been freed from the clutches of your student debt and have more room to breathe. You'll move on to caring about the next thing that is affecting your life directly. That's not a criticism of you or anybody, it's just the natural reaction.


I’m done. You’re not engaging with what I was saying, and instead are talking down to me and others like we only care about ourselves. Please, please try to listen to the points people are making. Your entire first paragraph is literally gaslighting and talking down to me and others.

I have engaged you at every single point, and will continue to if you choose to continue making arguments. I have been listening to your points, but frankly so far they haven't been very good ones. I think what you're doing here is just throwing your hands up in frustration that not everyone just immediately agrees with what you believe to be the obvious conclusions here, rather than making convincing arguments for what you believe.

By my first paragraph, I assume you mean the parenthetical at the beginning? If so, that isn't what "gaslighting" means, and while I can see how you read it as talking down to you, it can't be talking down to anyone else, because it is solely responding to a particular style in a few comments you specifically have written.


You haven’t engaged me with research or data once, you just keep concern trolling. Please try to at least use something quantitative to backup your arguments

You post one article and claim it’s it’s “THE” study or data for hours and hours and post and reply constantly. Log off for a bit, take a break, it might do you some good.

My argument isn't quantitative, it's predicting how the policy will impact incentives and thus peoples' future behavior. Incentives matter in policy construction, but not everything that matters can be put on a chart or in a table of numbers.

"Forgive the loans AND tackle the rising cost of tuition by nationalizing? "

Have you seen any efforts for tackling the rising cost? I haven't. They have spent a ton of energy on a one-off stunt and have done absolutely nothing to tackle real issue.


Yes, this has been a national issue with bills and campaigns for almost as long as I can remember. What do you mean?

Also a subsidy to landlords that would simply raise rent by the forgiveness amounts.

[flagged]

[flagged]

I thought we were talking about student loans?

Why not? They have access to credit data and are able to adjust pricing close to what is affordable. Much of the rental market is consolidated by 10-figure firms running similar sets of algorithms.

Because there is no new money being created, no one is being paid more, that amount is already being charged because the students already have that money as they aren’t paying loans. Also, if they were paying loans, there would still be the same net amount of money in the system

I wonder very much if Biden can instead mandate payments "going to zero" by mandating interest rate cuts to 0% and allowing borrowers by decree to just not pay. I've heard some trickles this is actually well within the rights of the Department Of Education to do.

I've also seen some people advocating for a general student loan payment strike, but that feels dicey. Everyone would need to do it, basically, and there's no way to prove solidarity, it'd be a legal mess IMO.

The 3rd, although more out there idea, has to do with setting up specialty bankruptcy support for student loans, allow them to be dismissed via proceedings, without it being reported negatively on a credit report.

I don't think there's any good alternatives to legislating it, if one wants to pursue relief here, except removing interest rates or something of that nature.

I myself am withholding my own opinions, other than to say I support student loan relief efforts. I'm just cataloging what I'm seeing in (anecdotally of course) large numbers online people talking about.


Agreed that education costs should be driven down, but the strain on borrowers is very real. It's bothersome that the government prohibits relief in the form of bankruptcy.

It's easy to be unsympathetic when something doesn't impact you personally. I'm not impacted by student loans, but I've heard enough stories from close friends to give me pause.

I am very empathetic to their plight and worry we have knee capped a sizeable portion of a generation, which will impact the economy and society as well.


I chose to become a self-taught developer, vs going to school, to avoid having student loans plague me. I weighed the options and didn't like the math.

The two paths were hard forks. It was a big decision.

I'm still "paying" the price in the form of reduced wages, surely.

Student loans weren't a great option, so I didn't take them. Why does everyone else take them, and then pass the blame and responsibility to the government?


Do you feel the same way about disaster relief, since you chose not to live that area?

I haven't had student loans since the early 2000s and I'm fine with forgiving them or at least reducing interest rates to something very low.


Yes, I do.

I lived in an active hurricane zone for most of my life, fwiw, and half my family just got screwed in 2022.

They've all variously moved away and come back. Hurricanes are a price you pay for coastal views. If I could put a beach in the landlocked state I live in now, it would probably generate incredible value.

I haven't taken a position on loan forgiveness, I've only taken a position on people blaming others for their own choices.


There's more than hurricanes, though. What of forest fires, floods, and tornadoes? You can't fault people for living within proximity of trees, rivers, and flat areas.

Okay, how about California's forest fires? They've been in the news. I'm seeing a lot of fault being passed around like "hey, we should have been doing prescribed burns for hundreds of years". We've had lots and lots of forest fires. I won't be moving my family into the California wilderness.

But I do live in a wild place, and a fire is a possibility. I pay for insurance to cover that, so I believe I'm footing my own bill as far as my own personal involvement. I wouldn't expect to receive a dime from anyone else; I never did during a hurricane.


> I wouldn't expect to receive a dime from anyone else; I never did during a hurricane.

You did, though, indirectly. Federal funds were used in lieu of state funds (your taxes). In essence, I paid for some of your cleanup. I agree that you didn't receive a personal check from the federal government, but you did benefit from their action.

Even your insurance is done with this method -- you pay an insurance premium which is far less than what would be paid out in the event that your house burned to the ground. If we're using the same insurance company, my premiums go toward that as well.


Okay, but does that come back around and lead you to believe that's the same as paying back loans that individuals took of their own volition?

I walked into your trap, you got me--my region received hurricane funds. So now we should pay Chad's student loan back even though Chad said he'd do that himself? Huh?


I'm saying that it's hypocritical to tolerate federal assistance in one case but not in another. I live in a safe area, away from forest fires, tornadoes, flooding, and hurricanes, but I'm okay with sending federal aid to other states as a cost of living in a society.

On the other hand, we have a lot of people, about 20% of borrowers, who are in default and in dire financial situations. They will likely end up homeless or destitute, which has obvious negative impact to the community. For these people, forgiveness would be life changing. If you look into the program, it wasn't going to forgive 100% of the loans, but rather a smaller amount and it was income limited.

Does it really hurt you because someone else is helped? I certainly didn't feel hurt when my tax dollars went toward your hurricane damage.

I'm saying this as someone who saved for my children's education, and started doing so years before they were born.


I never claimed to be hurt. I do not feel hurt when someone else is helped.

I still don't think that absolves people of the responsibility they put upon themselves. You're totally ignoring that part of the argument, and it's really my only argument.

And clearly we need to pick and choose where to spend our money; we can't aid every cause. That doesn't make everyone a hypocrite. I don't think you've even made a case that I am one; your alternative idea of "federal assistance to the state of Florida" doesn't really compare well to "helping individuals repay loans they directly benefit from"; it's not at all the same class of spending.

Anyway no, people who are against this very specific form of federal aid are not hypocrites if they support some other very specific form of federal aid. That is not a logical conclusion.


It is not full loan forgiveness, they would still be responsible for the remainder.

I find it funny that we tolerate fabricating billions of dollars to bail out banks with TARP, wipe out billions (trillions?) of dollars in tax revenue with the TCJA, but draw the line when it comes to actually helping the little guy.

I'm even okay with being more strict with the income requirements so that those who are truly struggling can contribute more to society. Would you accept debt forgiveness for those currently in default? Keep in mind that declaring bankruptcy is not a viable option for these people as student loans are not discharged in that case.


I don't know where I personally draw the line or whatever. I'm not okay with the bank bailouts, or the PPP forgiveness. In fact, I was so staunchly against the PPP that I chose not to take it, despite easily qualifying. I made the choice for my business to take an SBA loan that gets repaid with (low) interest.

I would consistently vote against giving tax money to private entities, given the chance (but look at our options here--we're just voting which private entities to give it to). I'm sure I'm in favor of giving private entities money in some cases, but my core belief is in personal responsibility (to a point you might find extreme), and so most of my positions can be deduced from that.

That being said, I would totally be all about a program to loan students the money with no interest. I think that solves really all the problems. It's not hard to get out from under it. It's very clear what you're signing up for, even as a young adult. It's not victimizing young people and their poor decision-making.

I'd even be totally okay forgiving the previous terms of the existing loans, and eliminating the interest. But to have other people pay for your expensive, optional education that will (hopefully) greatly benefit your life? At everyone else's expense? No, I'm never going to vote for that, no. We already give most people a very expensive primary school education, and just looking around, I would say most of that education is squandered & forgotten.

I don't vote with my heart. People struggling is not a big motivator for me in the voting box (but it certainly is in my personal life). I want them to do better, but I think the struggling is an important part of that process. It certainly was for me. I would encourage people to really dwell in that struggle; I consider it a fundamental, pivotal part of my human experience.


> That being said, I would totally be all about a program to loan students the money with no interest. I think that solves really all the problems. It's not hard to get out from under it. It's very clear what you're signing up for, even as a young adult. It's not victimizing young people and their poor decision-making.

> I'd even be totally okay forgiving the previous terms of the existing loans, and eliminating the interest.

Hey, we agree on something!


Because the math you were forced to do was caused by very specific policy decisions at the government level that radically changed how schools were publicly funded directly(lower costs to all students) to one where it is "public funding" but private risk by student loans that drove up perverse incentives to bloat school bureaucracy and lower the educational standards and raise costs. https://educationdata.org/average-cost-of-college-by-year

While you were in a position to make a certain career decision due to the field you wanted to go into (tech), other field require schooling. For example medicine doesn't have on the job training that allows one to be a nurse, radiology tech, respiratory tech, dr, surgeon and so forth. Do you want there to be even less of those people?

What about accountants? What about engineers? Should they just "teach themselves". The idea was that all these roles are publicly beneficial and we used to recognize that.

The "Policy" of student loans was a government decision and directly created this problem and it is what needs to change to solve it.


I don't think the people that took out degrees leading into medicine, law, accounting, or tech are the ones struggling to repay their loans.

The people struggling to repay their loans are those that have degrees with little or no economic value.

The main criticism from blue-collared voters on student loan forgiveness is the moral hazard of allowing students to take out loans for degrees with virtually no economic value. Of course, this criticism was completely ignored by the college educated elite whom refuse to entertain the idea a degree needs to have a measurable ROI. There are many other factors that play into this, but this is the crux of the matter.


Interesting that the top major of student loan holders is Nursing https://educationdata.org/student-loan-debt-by-major Also student loans and the funding of education and the artificial scarcity and perverse incentives that it produces is one of the direct causes of the shortage of medical professionals of all stripes in the US. https://www.healthcaredive.com/news/lawmakers-fixes-healthca... As the OP that I responded to argued, the risk of loans prevented him from pursuing a degree. That risk most definitely plays apart in prospective medical students deciding to enter the field because if they fail at any point in that journey they are directly responsible for a ungodly huge sum of money.

Also the moral hazard argument is a red herring to rage bait the blue collar segment of the population and disregards the breadth of actual majors of student loan holders. And secondly it still does nothing to address the actual government policy decision that gave rise to this problem. The policy of student loan (public and individual student risk) vs direct public funding (public and institutional risk).


How many nurses are struggling to find work and repay their loans?

The number of students enrolling in a program and the amount of debt taken out by those students doesn't matter if there is a positive return on investment and the debt is repaid.

The blue-collared voter views the moral hazard as the end of the conversation. Attempting to diminish or dismiss this as a red herring is counterproductive and doesn't accomplish what you want.

It's akin to trying to convince a friend to rob a bank with you. The friend doesn't need to hear the hifalutin plan to know it's stupid and wrong, but you're getting upset that your friend doesn't want to sit down and hear it for three hours.


Government policy, however well intentioned, created this system of incentives to encourage and boost college enrollment. Further exacerbating the problem are special intrest groups (lenders and schools) who salivated at the thought of a blank check from the feds.

I think it's silly to view this in a way that generates ill feelings for folks who pursued education. The blame falls on the government, lenders and schools. They should bear the cost of any forgiveness.


It's important to remember when talking to friends, that people are the heroes of their own stories and have a naturally biased perspective.

For my entire twenties, I could have been one of your friends complaining about the burden of my student loans. Nowadays I complain about the burden of my mortgage. But in both cases I got loans for valuable things on very reasonable terms. Just because I feel personally burdened does not mean it's a crisis for society.

It also doesn't mean nothing should ever be done. Personally I think income based repayment is a great policy. Maybe we should make that more generous for its current beneficiaries can't afford housing or families at its current level (anecdotally that wasn't the case for my friends who took advantage of the program, but it's a statistical question and I don't know the answer).

But many people seem to act like blanket forgiveness is the only workable or fair policy, and I'm just not convinced.


Here’s some research showing loan forgiveness would be a net boon on the economy

https://www.levyinstitute.org/pubs/rpr_2_6.pdf


Interesting!

But my criticism is not based on whether or not it would be a boon or a hindrance to the economy...


what would it take, quantitatively, to alleviate any concerns with this policy of forgiveness?

Unfortunately it would require knowledge of the future. My concern with the policy is that I believe it creates perverse incentives that encourage a continuing spiral of more costly higher education, resulting in more debt, and unpredictable periodic political battles over "one-time" forgiveness.

If you could come back from the future and say "that didn't happen, instead it gave college graduates the breathing room they needed to become politically engaged and they successfully pushed for permanent solutions to the problem of increasing costs and debt", then I'd be happy to take the L!

Or perhaps if you could find an analogous country where a one-time blanket forgiveness led to more foundational improvements to the financing of higher education in that country, that would help alleviate my concerns.

But barring that analogous country that already did this (which I don't think exists because, as you've noted, our current system is weird and different than how it works elsewhere), I don't think there's a quantitative answer to this question, because that's just not where my concern lies.


And I believe the opposite. So where is your proof? You seem to be doing a lot of pearl clutching

Ok so here's the belief I think you must be saying you believe the opposite of:

> I believe it creates perverse incentives that encourage a continuing spiral of more costly higher education, resulting in more debt, and unpredictable periodic political battles over "one-time" forgiveness.

So you believe that forgiving loans will instead create good incentives that lead to lower costs for higher education. Can you explain the mechanism by which you think that would happen? I've described how I predict people would behave, but I'm curious how you think it would shake out.


A net boon says nothing about who are the winners and losers.

If I steal 100K from you and turn it into 110K for me, that is a net gain. However, you might not find it very favorable.


Did you read the paper? It’s very much not an argument for Peter robbing Paul. Unless you’re saying investing in people’s education is robbery?

I read maybe a quarter of the paper and I guess I'm saying both.

It's robbing Peter to pay Paul. Someone with student debt gets relief and greater spending capacity and everyone else just get some more national debt and higher interest rates.

It is all upside for one party and all downside for the other. As the paper states, GDP goes up, but less than the total cost over a 10 year horizon.

Forgiving 1.4 Trillion debt is predicted "Over the 10-year forecast, the policy generates between $861 billion and $1,083 billion in real GDP.

Now GDP doesn't equal federal revenue so you are really looking at adding $1.4T debt for a fraction of $1T in returns.


To address these other concerns, checkout out podcasts like pitchfork economics or freakanonics. There’s no reason to think interest would go up. That’s just concern trolling from republicans

It says so in the paper you have been linking everywhere

What's expensive is locking up citizens' purchasing power so that they are beholden to these institutions, instead of giving them the option to put money into their community, particularly their fellow citizens' pockets, by shopping and eating.

Nobody seemed to have an issue with giving loan forgiveness to businesses. Why do we allow businesses to socialize their losses and privatize their profits? Nobody batted an eye when the last administration created an additional 3T in deficit.

Investing in Americans education is single handedly the best investment America can make as a country. I rather see bad business models fail and watch educated Americans fill in the gaps.


You're right I didn't have a problem with it in 2020 when those loans intended to keep businesses from permanently shuttering were forgiven. But I would certainly dislike the same policy now. Things are super different today than they were three years ago...

> Nobody seemed to have an issue with giving loan forgiveness to businesses.

Well that's obviously false. I had a problem with it. And if you dared to say it during the pandemic, you were likely to get stoned by the wildly emotional pandemic mob.

The solution to the cost of education is the US, is to realize the cost somewhere, ie make someone actually responsible for the fact that very young adults with next to zero credit / income / responsibility are borrowing rather insane sums of money they can't actually afford to borrow. Society can debate who gets to be responsible (banks, universities, taxpayers, borrowers), someone has to be, otherwise the upward spiral (of debt) will just continue until it becomes an outsized economic threat (it's getting there). For decades the can has been kicked down the road intentionally, nobody wants to take responsibility. Biden and the Democrat approach is just more debt via loan forgiveness, which will result in an even bigger loan forgiveness after that.

It's identical to the healthcare cost problem in the US. The Democrats want to solve healthcare via universal healthcare, and they want to pretend it can be done without fixing the cost problem. They never talk about dramatically reducing the cost of healthcare, and how many millions of jobs need to be vaporized to do it, and how many medical professionals need to take a big pay cut to do it. The gravy train has to end, and that means millions of nurses, doctors, hospital workers get slashed pay; millions of related industry jobs vanish (in insurance, medtech, pharma, et al.), and the middle class and higher incomes that go with them.

Big education - the government borrowing pact with universities and their freewheeling ability to spend - is a gravy train for admin and universities generally, and has been for decades. It has to end just the same as big healthcare's gravy train has to end. Salaries have to be smashed, jobs have to be destroyed en masse, everything has to be squeezed, cut, slashed. Which is exactly how most of Europe manages their healthcare systems - tight rationing, tight controls.


Removing the bankruptcy exemption from student loans as was the status quo prior to the 1980s solves this. The lenders then have a vested interest in ensuring that their lendees generate enough income to pay off the loans.

> Investing in Americans education is single handedly the best investment America can make as a country.

Loan forgiveness is not an investment in education


Yes, yes it is

The courses were taken, the education was received. This would just transfer the cost of already provided services to the general taxpayer. It would make nobody more educated as a result.

How would it cost the taxpayer more? Can you explain? The money has already been spent, and it’s already being collected in the form of taxes on those individuals whom are now earning more thanks to education. Why would we need more taxes?

That's why I said "general taxpayer". It would be paid by people other than the ones receiving the education. You might argue this is how things should be, but it's still not an "investment in education".

If you are trying to argue that the increased tax levied on the particular indebted people with a better education adds up to the exact amount they owed, someone would have to prove that. Additionally, this additional tax from better education was never intended by Congress, when the tax rate was calculated, to go to paying anyone's previous education debt. So other services (arguably benefitting the entire population) would have to be preempted to pay for it. Either way, you'd have someone else paying for the debt.


Reposting so others don’t feed into this propaganda. The talking point that loan forgiveness would “raise taxes” is at best dubious. Here is one, of many studies that dispute it

https://www.levyinstitute.org/pubs/rpr_2_6.pdf


This is a common attitude, and an understandable one, but it’s very much at odds with the research. There are more studies and discussions, but this is one of them highlighting how this is a nothing burger

https://www.levyinstitute.org/pubs/rpr_2_6.pdf


Having loan forgiveness policy is an investment in education. One time loan forgiving of people who already gotten education is not.

A thought upon budget allotment and condition for loan forgiveness every year is significantly better than spending it in one go for publicity.


> One time loan forgiving of people who already gotten education is not.

The one time forgiveness was adopted roughly simultaneously with reforms to lending and, particularly, repayment programs designed to ameliorate the creation of the same debt problem, it wasn’t a policy adopted by itself in a vacuum.


I am not fully aware of the context and I couldn't even find it. Could you send some links for "reforms to lending and, particularly, repayment programs designed to ameliorate the creation of the same debt problem"?

Why not both?

>> Loan forgiveness is not an investment in education

> Yes, yes it is

No. It most definitely is not.

It's paying off a bunch of loans that people freely agreed to accept in exchange for their chosen degree. It's the abdication of all responsibility. It's the creation of a society where commitments mean nothing. It is also rewarding behavior that isn't constructive and, devoid of consequences, is caustic.

Plenty of us have taken-on these commitments and worked hard for decades making good on our agreement and paying off the loans. What entitles this generation to behave as children when they should behave as adults?

How about we pay off half of everyone's mortgages then and call it an investment? I guarantee that would have far greater impact than the student loan bailout?

And, BTW, after you pay off my mortgage, I get to keep living in my house forever. Because, well, if we pay off someone's student loan/s, they get to keep the degree and use it to make money.

The whole thing is laughable.

Want to fix student loans? Get government out of that business ASAP. The minute loans don't have that guarantee, the cost of education will drop precipitously.

The other thing that is important is to remove non-degree coursework as graduation requirements. Someone going for an engineering degree has to spend about one full year on coursework having nothing to do with engineering. One way to look at this is that, in the US, 25% of your student loan is for shit that is not going to help get you hired. Or that 25% of your loan isn't for engineering coursework.

Being that this is a requirement for graduation, this means that this unnecessary 25% of the cost of the degree is being imposed on every single student. That's wrong.


> It's the creation of a society where commitments mean nothing.

What about accepting risks? Should those who used SVB have been bailed out?


> Should those who used SVB have been bailed out?

No. Absolutely and most definitely not.


Appreciate the consistency, thanks.

I’m sorry that you feel that way, but I’m happy to help these people

> I’m happy to help these people

Then do it. And show us how you do it.

Nothing prevents you from setting the example, using some criteria to find a target for your charity and paying off some or all of their student loan. Maybe you can take over the payments?

In fact, you could start a foundation of like-minded people and help hundreds, or thousands, of people.

Here's the difference: You get to do whatever you want with your money. Including finding people who think like you and want to join you.

The other approach is forcing everyone to jump on your bandwagon. And that is wrong.

I paid every dime back. So did my wife. We did without lots of things for a very long time while meeting the obligations we entered into to go to school. We both worked full time jobs while we were in school. We didn't take vacations for a long time while we evolved financially and in our respective careers.

That's what commitment and honoring responsibilities looks like.

People with student loans whining about not being bailed out is the pinnacle of adults behaving as petulant children. Grow the fuck up! They bought something that will benefit them for the rest of their lives. The government facilitated that by guaranteeing that loan. No sane lender would have ever provided these loans without this guarantee. Time to behave as an adult and pay for it.

Bullshit degree?

Too bad. Not my problem. I am not responsible for someone paying $150K for a Masters in Underwater Basket Weaving. Tough shit. You fucked up.

Want to blame someone for that expensive Ms in Basket Weaving that can only make you $35K/year? Blame yourself. Stop voting for snake oil salesmen who promise the world and end-up damaging everyone who voted for them. If government was out of the student loan business that degree would not be worth more than $15K to $30K, if that. Your voting decisions have consequences. You have to pay for those just as well.

How about paying off everyone's cars? And then, we don't take them away. They keep using their car for free, just like a student loan bailout would allow someone to use their degree for profit forever.

Of course, some will have bought sensibly-priced cars, while others will have spent $150K for a car to drive the kids to school.

Lets force everyone in the nation who paid-off their vehicles through hard work and responsible behavior to pay for the cars bought by others who are now whining about their loans. Brilliant.

If you want to pay-off people's cars, be my guest. Again, private money and private decisions, you are free to do this...and more.

Let us know if you pay off someone's loan or start a private foundation to do just that. I'm sure many on HN who share your way of thinking will gladly donate tens of thousands of dollars (or more) to demonstrate these are not just empty words and the truly get behind what they say with non-trivial financial commitments for the benefit of others.


The research on this is clear, what you’re describing is totally unrelated

https://www.levyinstitute.org/pubs/rpr_2_6.pdf

Also, and I mean this sincerely… are you okay? You sound angry, resentful even. Please go talk to someone, this seems much bigger than student loan forgiveness.


> The research on this is clear

Yeah, sure, people can write papers to justify anything.

Like I said, let's cancel everyone's auto loans and mortgages. I'll be we could write a compelling paper in support of that.

> are you okay?

Very funny. Insult shrouded behind fake sincerity.

I am fine, than you. Are you? You don't seem to understand reality at all. Please go talk to someone.

> You sound angry

Everyone who isn't a under heavy sedation should be angry at the stupid nonsense our society today seems to insist on passing for virtues. It is destroying our society to the bone. Splitting us up into more and more subsets brought into resonance by expert manipulators.

Don't believe me? Give it ten years, come back and compare notes. If we remain on this path nothing good will come from it. Sadly, we might have already passed a point of no return years ago.

The issue here is that it is far easier for political actors to work on the basis of creating resonance in subsets of the population than to actually do the difficult work of governing and solving real problems --which isn't easy at all.

Far easier to portray daily life as an ideological civil war with many "us vs. them" slices of society than to actually solve real problems over time.

One approach leads to easy votes and easy paths to stay in power. The other requires hard work and the risk of not delivering results, which could end political careers. The internet and social media gave politicians the tools necessary to focus on nothing except divide-resonate-and-conquer.

It's a game. The masses play. Politicians win. Society gets screwed.

For the unthinking among us, if they can reduce life to a set of mono-variable issues and clear good-vs-evil players, maybe feed them a few great looking graphs, PDF's and websites in the process, maybe even an idiot well-known actor who is stupid enough (most of them are) to get behind the cause, well, politicians and the money brokers that surround them do just fine.

Of course, the population doesn't do fine. They do worse and worse with the passage of time. Pick a time line, say, 50 years:

    - The healthcare system is a horrible train-wreck
    - Our system of education K-12 is worse than in some third world countries
    - Our university system sells, for hundreds of thousands of dollars, 
      a product that, at most, should cost tens of thousands, or 
      be free (as it is in countless nations)
    - Our systems of mass transportation are a mess
      The California high speed train project is an example of just 
      how incompetent we have become
    - Our actions on business, nationally and internationally, have 
      driven entire industries out of the country --forever
    - Air travel lately?  OMG!
    - We can't build anything at scale any more
      Remember "shovel ready projects"?  Yeah, good luck
      Just one drive up and down Interstate 5 in CA summarizes where
      we are well:  We can't build anything, and, when we do,
      it's third world
    - We have degrades so far that we can't even manufacture masks 
      and medical equipment during a pandemic
    - And, yes, we have layers of society who would rather whine 
      and be taken care of by government than engage in the difficult
      work that elevates societies and people at all levels
These are things everyone should be angered by. And this list isn't even exhaustive. Take travelling around the nation. It's a disaster. I have been to airports and have travelled through immigration systems in very small nations that put major US airports to absolute shame. One that comes to mind is Singapore. Comparing just that experience to entering the US through LAX, Dallas, JFK or any other airport is nothing less than shameful. It should embarrass and, yes, anger everyone.

One way or another, we have managed to allow our politicians (note I have not pointed at a single unique party) to devolve our nation and society into something that is simply not headed in the right direction at all. The things these people have done and are doing continue to guarantee the irrelevance of the US (and Europe) on the world stage and 100 to 200 years (if not more) of Chinese domination at nearly all levels.

I guess the unthinking among us need to find themselves in that reality before they understand just how stupid they have been to not laugh these politicians off the stage and replace them with people who will deliver results and not focus on dividing the population into subsets that are easy to manipulate for votes.

I have worked in manufacturing, technology, electronics, software, commercial, industrial and aerospace domains for four decades. We have been moving backwards, for decades. We have eroded our ability to sustain and grow our economy to a point that likely has no return.

Just try to manufacture any non-trivial product in the US and Europe and the realization of how bad things are will feel like a bucket of ice water. In fact, try to manufacture most trivial products (masks, gowns, syringes, disinfectant wipes) in the US and Europe and the results will likely be the same.

This is the result of decades of incompetence and politicians focusing on their political objectives rather than going to work for us doing the difficult job of managing the affairs of a nation.

Yes, everyone should be angry, because, without a massive unifying force and a clear vision of common goals --without everyone pushing in the same direction-- this is going in a direction most are not going to like. It's like the proverbial crab being slow-boiled. Ignorance, as it turns out, isn't, in the end, bliss.


We want the same things, but please try to at least engage with me on the data and research. I don’t want the powers that be to crush us any more than you do. I care about people, and from what you’ve written I know you do too, so let’s tackle this the best we can with the information we have. I’m not trying to trick you, really

> engage with me on the data and research

Look, I know bullshit when I see it. I've been around that long. Sorry, and I do not mean this as a personal attack, the study you posted is complete horseshit. And so is every single study that claims that forcing the entire population to pay for some X a subset of the population chose to buy on their own accord is not a way to build a society based on personal responsibility and the idea that your rights must end where mine begin.

I'll give you one example of this in healthcare. Our family was nicely covered and happy with an insurance plan that cost us $650 per month and had a low thousands deductible way back when. Then President Obama comes along and publicly promises everyone: "If you like your doctors, you'll keep them. If you like your healthcare plan, you'll keep it." He is on video multiple times making this assertion.

What happened? We were forced into Obamacare. Why? The terms of the bill forced companies to cancel all prior plans. And then, our plan went from $650 per month to over $1,800 per month. The deductible went from somewhere around $4,000 per year to over $9,000 per year. We could no longer go the the doctors we had been going to for years.

I did the math. My family would have to be run over by a truck before our insurance would pay real benefits. And yet we have been spending over $22K per year on premiums for over twelve years now. That's over TWO HUNDRED AND SEVENTY THOUSAND DOLLARS so far since being forced into this fucking abomination. Over $270K. For what?

And I voted for that fucker too. Biggest mistake of my life. Incompetent to the core. Well spoken like few before and after him. And, of course, he used that to divide this nation in ways most have yet to recognize. And costs will go up. At this rate I would not be surprised if it costs my family over a million dollars in my lifetime.

Perfect example of a politician promising to help people, yet causing great harm instead. One can find examples of this kind of thing across the isle as well. Not claiming Democrats are the only culpable here.

Politicians in this nation, by law, can lie to all of us and suffer no consequences for it. That's wrong and should change. They are causing way too much damage using that superpower.

The political "species" --because they are not human beings, they are parasites-- in the US has done more damage to this country in the last 50 years than any of our enemies could have hoped to inflict on us through any means available to them. They have destroyed this nation from the inside by only caring about themselves while pretending to care for those who's votes they want and need.

Why people do not wake up to this and revolt is something I might never understand. The fact that, in 2016, our only two choices for "leadership" were Trump and Clinton says a lot about just how stupid we all are and how putrid our political system has become. Out of all the brilliant and capable people in this nation, those two rose to the top? Amazing.

> let’s tackle this the best we can with the information we have

We have to be very careful. This "information we have" is deeply polluted by political forces and financial interests. I would advise anyone to almost, by default, discard anything that comes out of our universities one a range of topics. They have become paid political actors. The forces that be know how to manipulate this through grants and programs that only favor certain perspectives.

For example, go search for the body of articles challenging some of the narratives surrounding what we can and cannot do about atmospheric CO2 concentration and climate change. The number of studies --if you can find any-- is absolutely dwarfed by those showing we are Zeus and can lick this thing within a few years or even decades (which, of course, is complete and utter horseshit).

And so, if we were to tackle this with the information we have, the only conclusion they want us to reach is that we have to destroy entire economies to "save the planet" --which, again, is complete horseshit.

There are thing in life that don't require layers of research studies to understand or debunk. For example, any engineer with a reasonable amount of experience knows that building a submarine using a carbon fiber pressure hull is fucking stupid.

Bailing everyone out of X (which can be anything) isn't a way to build a strong, resilient, responsible society with self determination and ability to make good decisions and honor them despite outcomes. It's a way to build a loser society that will surely buckle at the first sign of trouble. Even worse, it's a way to build a society perennially dependent on government handouts, with all the downsides history has shown this brings.

I think there's reason to be angry. Some of us have been working hard for decades, only to see the people we hired to look after our nation destroy it from the inside and divide us to use us like pawns for their own benefit. That's not cool. That's something to be angry about. And rightly so.


Jesus Christ, you need help

Lol! You are up and down this thread personally attacking people who don't share your misunderstandings and then mic dropping the same link to a 60 page Economics report which famously enables the poor policy decisions you refuse to engage on in any other conversation. If you ever grow up I'm sure you'll come back to this thread and laugh at what a knobhead you were. Telling anyone who 1) disagrees with you and 2) is expressing any emotion, to "get help" is remarkably childish.

> Jesus Christ, you need help

I am flattered you see me as the son of God. I am not. If I were, I'd waste no time and fix the world with a single well-aimed divine fart.


>You sound angry, resentful even.

Taxes and wealth transfers are something that a reasonable person can be angry or even resentful of.

If someone went into your house and robbed you, you might be angry. You have bills, dreams, and children to care for. A lot of people would even want to kill the thief.

These policies have the same effect, but you are powerless to defend yourself.


> It's the abdication of all responsibility. It's the creation of a society where commitments mean nothing.

How do you feel about bankruptcy?


I have an issue with giving loan forgiveness to businesses. State governments shouldn't have forced private businesses to shut down in the first place. And if state governments chose to do so anyway, the federal government shouldn't have covered the cost of their bad policy decisions.

I’m glad they did, we were in a pandemic.

>Nobody seemed to have an issue with giving loan forgiveness to businesses. Why do we allow businesses to socialize their losses and privatize their profits?

Which loan forgiveness program are you talking about? The PPP loans was explicitly designed from the outset to be forgiven, if they were used for payroll. In the end it was a roundabout way for the government to ensure people continued to get paid during lockdowns, not a way to "socialize their losses and privatize their profits".


A debt jubilee isn't the kind of thing you just do. Like tipping over a vending machine:

- you gotta get it rocking first

- it might kill you if you do it wrong

I view this as a preliminary wobble.


> very expensive stunt that fixed nothing.

I agree. The universities can charge whatever they want, they get paid upfront, and when the student defaults on the loan they bear no consequence. The current system is deeply broken and in much need of reform. The scale of the problem is immense with tens of millions of American adults in student debt. You want to forgive student loans? Great. But at least fix the root problem.


Well they should make public college tuition free combined with wiping out those loans. They also need to make student loans for private schools not guaranteed by the government and at risk of being dissolved in a personal bankruptcy.

All the leeches involved in higher education and lending will never put up with that though. So the rent-seeking and indentured servitude will continue.


Republicans have proposed laws to increase transparency to families regarding outcomes of graduates. They also want to make colleges accountable when graduates cannot pay off their loans. [1]

I don't think there has been any support from Democrats.

1: https://www.nola.com/news/politics/gop-senators-introduce-bi...


Because that’s just forces colleges to accept rich white kids who will be the less risky in regards to paying off their loans. Guys, y’all are supposed to be smart, really? You all can’t see through this bullshit?

Why stoop to baseless insults? Even if you don't want colleges to be accountable, surely you can't deny that transparency regarding student outcomes would be useful.

What would it take to convince you otherwise? I mean this honestly, because I hear the above statement a lot and it’s very foreign to me. If anything it’s a long shot, sure, but the forgiveness is a great forcing function. We can tackle this from multiple angles. Nationalize state schools, write off current predatory loans, etc. There are very few downsides that are actually backed up by data that I can find. A lot of the arguments presented here (not you, others) are philosophical

Considering these loans are non forgivable because of the governement, I think they are responsible for the exponential growth in cost and should bear the blame

Ok so next you're going to go after PPP loan forgiveness, right? I'll wait.

That definitely should be done. But neither party will go after those people. They are donors after all.

All the PPP money I got went to my employees like it should have. I do however support going after those that hoarded it for themselves by fraud.

I'm not too up to date on this particular fact, as I disconnected from all that during the pandemic - which companies / businesses hoarded it for themselves?

I could have hoarded it for myself by paying myself a higher wage, or I could have fired all my employees and hired my family members.

I suspect this happened more than a few times.


The difference is PPP loan forgiveness was approved by Congress.

Not saying it wasn’t poorly designed and implemented, and subject to massive levels of fraud - but forgiveness was clearly embedded into the law from the beginning.


It's an important difference. The White House basically pulled this broad student forgiveness policy out of their butts. They didn't have Congressional approval to do so, and were rightfully checked.

>We hold today that the Act allows the Secretary to ‘waive or modify’ existing statutory or regulatory provisions applicable to financial assistance programs under the Education Act, not to rewrite that statute from the ground up.


The enabling law for this policy was the 2003 HERO's Act, which has been used prior to Biden's student loan forgiveness plan to modify loan conditions.

So this policy was approved by Congress.


The Biden administration used the emergency of the pandemic to justify loan forgiveness under the Heroes Act.

…Except the exact same week student loan forgiveness was announced, Biden went on 60 minutes and announced that the pandemic was over.

So even if you accept the argument that the Heroes act justified widescale forgiveness, the Biden administration did itself no favors selling that argument.


The Republican Supreme Court cited a new conservative legal doctrine know as the "major questions doctrine" to issue this ruling.

Biden's own words aren't relevant.


I think both the ruling (and the major questions doctrine generally) and Biden's policy are bad.

I think his words are relevant. Whether or not the Supreme Court chose to cite them in this case.

I don’t think we should be cheering when our government digs for legal loopholes to get around the fact that it can’t pass a bill through Congress.


It's not a new doctrine, it's separation of powers.

The cited reason in statute for the ability to waive or modify student loan provisions was to provide relief for hardship during a national emergency. Just because the emergency was technically near completion doesn't mean that there wasn't broad hardship that could be given relief.

Just like, say, the official national emergency of katrina ended waaaayyy before many of those affected no longer faced hardship from the emergency.


(Hurricane Katrina was never a national emergency.)

President Bush declared Katrina to be a national emergency on August 27, 2005.

http://web.mit.edu/12.000/www/m2010/finalwebsite/katrina/gov...

> Before Hurricane Katrina made landfall, Governor Katherine Babineaux Blanco declared a state of emergency in Louisiana on August 26, 2005, and asked President Bush to do the same at the federal level the next day, a request with which he complied. This authorized FEMA to organize and mobilize resources as it saw fit to help the residents of New Orleans (Office of the Press Secretary 2005).


That source does not support the claim, in particular not containing the word "national".

A federal level emergency is a national emergency.

PPP went through Congress, the Senate, and the President - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paycheck_Protection_Program#Le...

The government wasn't allowing certain businesses to operate and curtailed their operation. PPP was a response to that.

Nobody is forcing you to take on massive student loan debts.


The ability of the secretary of education to "waive or modify" any student loan repayment provisions during a national emergency that congress officially declared in order to provide relief to those affected by the emergency was also approved by Congress, the Senate, and the President.

That was a very short time limited emergency program. It's not a good analogy to blanket forgiveness. If this had somehow targeted some weird thing from the pandemic (paying some kind of reparations to students who were in college during '20 and '21 and had their experiences totally screwed up?) then it would be a better analogy.


Can they instead reduce the interest rate?

Earlier this month, the NY Times warned students and their families to "Expect Interest Rates on Federal Student Loans to Rise" to as high as 8.05% for new PLUS loans this fall. That news came as Apple, just days after a recent $90 billion share buyback, filed a prospectus with the SEC for a new $5 billion bond program with longer-term bonds expected to have a coupon rate of approximately 5%. The imbalance between loan rates for students and Apple shareholders was actually far more pronounced before the Fed fund rate hikes started last year in response to inflation. During the pandemic, Apple -- which reported around $166.3 billion in cash and investments on its balance sheet as of March 31 -- held a bond sale worth $14 billion for stock buybacks and dividends to benefit from borrowing rates as low as 0.70%. Direct PLUS student loan rates at that time were down to 5.30% for new loans but as high as 8.5% for existing loans (the U.S. Dept. of Education does not offer refinancing of its up-to-30-year fixed rate loans in times of much lower interest rates). Unlike the tax-deductible interest Apple pays, annual deductions on student loan interest are capped by the IRS at $2,500 (or lower, depending on the borrower's income).

https://news.slashdot.org/story/23/05/30/2132241/student-loa...


8.05%

Jesus. That's high.

For a $100k loan (not unusual for high paying degrees), you'd need to shell out over $650 a month just to break even with interest.


The national emergency is over now so they actually can't make changes anymore.

Aside from ignoring that obviously none of the plaintiffs had legal standing here, the "major questions doctrine" is an absolute sham of a legal theory.. I can't believe this court keeps going back to it to legislate.

I've written a number of comments here about how I didn't like the policy at issue here, but I think this is also right.

The student loan forgiveness plan was inflationary, poorly targeted and probably unnecessary, but obviously legal. I'm honestly gobsmacked at the lengths this court went to invent standing and rationale to overturn it. Who needs to win elections when you have a permanent higher body with veto over the President and the congress. Between the shadow docket and this nonsense, they can literally shape policy to be whatever they want.

I don't think obviously legal. I think you're right about the standing issue, but ignoring that, if it had reached the merits without any problem with standing, I think it is not obvious that the policy fits within the bounds of the HEROES Act. I really dislike the major questions doctrine - because I think it should be up to Congress to write laws without some other body second-guessing them about which parts of those laws are or aren't "major" - but I'm also not a strict textualist and often don't find these pure text-based arguments very compelling.

Separation of Powers is a pretty well-established principle of Con Law. The executive branch's responsibility is to execute the policies codified by the legislature, not to set policy via Presidential dictate.

When the legislature writes laws that give the President the power to modify or waive student loan debt in the case of a national emergency, and then we have a declared national emergency - the court has absolutely no grounds to say, "That's not what congress meant when they wrote the plain text of the law". It's absurd on its face - even more so for a body that pretends to be "textualist" when it suits their political goals.

Whatever you think of the actual forgiveness plan, Biden clearly had the power to enact it. John Roberts will go down as one of the worst Chief Justices in the history of the court and this majority with their incoherent opinions and complete flouting of ethics norms will likely be responsible for a complete revamp of the SC.


The law says "[the Secretary] may waive or modify any statutory or regulatory provision applicable to the student financial assistance programs under title IV of the [Education Act] as the Secretary deems necessary in connection with a war or other military operation or national emergency."

It doesn't say that the Secretary can cancel the debt entirely. I think it's somewhat of a stretch to say that waiving or modifying a regulatory provision related to the debt is the same thing as canceling it. Most people would interpret that as meaning something like you can pause repayment, adjust interest rates, etc.


It doesn't say waiving or modifying "a" regulatory provision, it says waiving or modifying "any" regulatory provision related to the debt. That certainly includes canceling it. "Any" and "waive" aren't up to reasonable interpretation here, which is probably why Roberts dodged them in favor of drilling down exclusively on the word "modify" and taking his textualist hat off so he could ignore the law as written and approved by Congress can be ignored because it had never been used in identical fashion before by a president.

Two small silver linings though. Roberts and his majority pulling all of these crazy stunts makes the SC much more interesting and has generated a ton of public interest. Public awareness and participation is gonna be an important step in reforming the court. Second, now that the majority no longer bothers with creating a legal pretext for its edicts (they aren't decisions without actual standing), they have created space within the legal world for serious conversation and effort towards reforming the SC to return it to its original intent as a judicial rather than legislative body. Reading some of the dissenting opionions it should strike anyone that the veneer of legal plausible deniability behind the conservative court's actions has been pierced to the point where you have dissenting justices quite explicitly calling out the unconstitutionality of the court's actions in writing.

"In adjudicating Missouri’s claim, the majority reaches out to decide a matter it has no business deciding. It blows through a constitutional guardrail intended to keep courts acting like courts," she wrote, adding that by deciding the case, the high court "exercises authority it does not have. It violates the Constitution."


I think it's a reasonable theory (regardless of how they apply it inconsistently). The President doesn't have universal power to do whatever, Congress should authorize specific actions that the President can do, and if those go beyond a reasonable amount of flexibility they would need to authorize that separately.

Say you hire someone to paint your house and then go on vacation and when you come back they replaced your roof as well and gave you a $30,000 bill. You would be legitimately angry that they didn't authorize this extra work with you first even if they argue it was related to painting because the roof interfered with the paint.



The student loan forgiveness plan aside, this seems like another decision which indicates the erosion of jurisprudence. Standing seems to have been conveniently worked around in this instance and the textualists of the court had no problem not interpreting the law as written to achieve this ruling.

Standing was more blatantly ignored in the web designer case. Nothing had actually happened. It was a hypothetical case.

Another opinion, along with EPA v West Virginia, that will be used to undercut SEC/CFTC regulation of Bitcoin.

From the Bloomberg article on the same topic:

> Student loan payments are set to resume in late August after a three-year pause. Millions of people could fall behind on their debt.

So that is going to immediately hit the economy with some major headwinds.


This is huge issue. Many people (like myself) left college during covid and haven't budgeted at all for the monthly payments after entering the workforce. There's going to thousands of deferments. It honestly feels like a debt trap of sorts.

You didn’t budget for it at all? Just 100% confident that you’d never have to pay it?

It is going to hit like a tax hike on the middle class. And this comes on the heels of corporations scooping up all the gains made during the pandemic via raising prices and inflation (also acting like a regressive tax). That should all spill over into consumption.

You knew you owed money and have payments. Why didn’t you?

I don't want to play the blame game, but you have to budget for making debt payments on a car, same thing here. I do get that the unpredictability sucks, and that's why I didn't like it when Biden did this in the first place (note: as a pretty big Biden supporter for other reasons), and a the rest of the blame is at the feet of the pandemic itself, which made tons of stuff unpredictable for everyone. I'm sympathetic to the budgeting surprise, but it's also the kind of thing that happens in life, and especially in these last few weird years.

How the hell do you not budget for your monthly debt payments?

> This is huge issue. Many people (like myself) left college during covid and haven't budgeted at all for the monthly payments after entering the workforce. There's going to thousands of deferments. It honestly feels like a debt trap of sorts.

Sorry, but that was totally your own mistake. Maybe an understandable one, but not something that requires collective action to solve.

Fixing your own mistakes often isn't easy and convenient. So you've got two months to figure out how to work your debt payments into your budget.


Is it really a mistake to take your government at their word? When an authority figure lies, far more culpability lies on the authority figure than the subordinate. In this case, it wasn't even a lie, it was active obstruction by politically-motivated wall-people of the Supreme Court.

If my boss says "You can work from home today", and I let my wife borrow the car, then the CEO says "You actually have to come into the office today or you're fired", who made a mistake? Maybe I could have, potentially maybe, known that my boss could be overruled, but it's hardly my fault. My boss has more culpability, because as someone who's job it is to relay information to me and make appropriate decisions based on their directives, they have an obligation to not fuck me over. But mostly it's the CEO's fault for being a dick.


Is it really a mistake to take your government at their word? Probably, yes. In this case, the actors likely knew they did not have the authority to unilaterally pursue this policy in a durable manner. It was misleading from the get.

But did the average person who was told their debt was going to be forgiven know that? I'm okay with arguing about the details of how much blame to place on the administration versus the regressives in the court, but dismissing out of hand the human suffering caused by the reversal by going "they should have known better" is patently evil.

> But did the average person who was told their debt was going to be forgiven know that?

How does that matter to the question if it was a mistake?

It's still a mistake to trust the wrong people, even if you didn't know better at the time. This seems like a good time to learn the lesson "don't count your chickens before they've hatched (even if someone tells you to)."

> ...how much blame to place on the administration versus the regressives in the court, but dismissing out of hand the human suffering caused by the reversal by going "they should have known better" is patently evil.

"Regressives"? "Human suffering"? "Patently evil"? That's, frankly, a completely immature and utterly ridiculous position to take on this. If someone robbed a bank and gifted you money from the robbery, would you call the cops "evil" for taking the money back, because of all the "suffering" it would cause you?

I get it, you really wanted student loans to be forgiven, but that doesn't make the people who oppose what you want "evil" or even bad.


While I'm totally for the debt forgiveness, anyone who saw that this was going to the Supreme Court should have planned for it to be overturned (i.e. plan for the worst, hope for the best), especially considering the judges known conservative leanings.

This has been known to be going to the Supreme Court since around January, I think, so people should have had about 8 months to prepare to start paying back their loans, and not just the two months since this judgement was passed.

Personally, while I did hold off on making payments for about eight months at the start of Covid, I resumed making payments during the pandemic and actually managed to pay off my student loans completely back in November of last year (although I was getting pretty close to paying them off anyway).

Other people could have started making small payments during this team, taken advantage of the zero interest to start making a larger dent in their payments, and increased slightly how much they were paying each month to ease the transition to full payments again when this kicks off again.

I'm aware that's easier said than done, though. My wife has student loans she hasn't made full payments on this entire time (I think she's been making half payments), so we're going to have a slightly rough transition also, but at least we no longer have the $400/month payments I was making on mine before the pandemic.


People massively overestimate the number of people with student debt and the size of that debt relative to the economy as a whole.

This will be a headwind yes, but not a "major" one, in an economy that remains strong while inflation remains higher than desired.

I don't think macroeconomics is a good reason to do this, but to the extent it's worth considering, I think it's a positive in the current macroeconomic environment.


In the current economic climate the consumer is under a lot of stress because the effect of inflation has been to increase corporate profits, so they're already feeling a "tax" from inflation. Borrowing is up in lower income households, even though rates are higher. This isn't going to help that situation any.

From Reuters:

> "We've seen evidence that middle to lower income consumers are cutting back on discretionary spending," said Mike Graziano, consumer products senior analyst at RSM US in New York.

> "Given the student loan relief plan was aimed at this customer cohort, any additional fixed monthly costs will result in additional financial pressure."

> Separately, 26.6 million Americans with federal student loans will start making interest payments in October when a more than three-year moratorium ends. Morgan Stanley estimates that the hit to households' disposable income could lower inflation-adjusted consumer spending by about 10 basis points this year and slice 7 basis points off GDP growth.

10 points here or there isn't much, but if they start to add up, that's how you wind up in a recession.


> "Given the student loan relief plan was aimed at this customer cohort, any additional fixed monthly costs will result in additional financial pressure."

The political claim is that the loan relief plan was aimed at "middle to lower income consumers". The reality is that its benefits would have been mostly concentrated in middle to upper income households. Student debt isn't actually a big problem at the low end of the income scale. It's mostly an upper middle class problem.

As usual, none of this is evenly distributed. I would say this is yet another setback for expensive cities like San Francisco and New York in the post-pandemic period, as there are lots of highly-educated people in those cities who will have to figure out how to pay for both their student loans and their rent, and lots of them will have to decide the answer is to move somewhere cheaper. But this is still a pretty small cohort, relative to the entire population of the country.


The people who struggle to pay back student loans aren't the upper middle class borrowers, and there's plenty of middle class and even lower class students (trying to do that whole american dream thing) who are saddled with debt.

Yeah here's the breakdown, this is the mean amount of debt held per household by income percentile, with 25-40 years old broken out as an age category:

    Income Percentile (%) All Households -Age 25-40 Households
    0-9.9                 $3,633.61        $9,656.34
    10-19.9               $3,285.49        $8,245.48
    20-29.9               $6,035.88       $11,804.46
    30-39.9               $7,401.99       $12,059.02
    40-49.9               $9,796.45       $20,744.43
    50-59.9               $9,814.08       $16,905.26
    60-69.9              $11,750.67       $28,708.72
    70-79.9              $13,999.30       $27,615.90
    80-89.9              $13,887.24       $27,382.43
    90-94.9               $9,727.94       $18,273.48
    95-98.9               $4,655.90       $11,178.10
    99-100                $3,156.78       $62,532.52
Here's the breakdown of the percentage of households that have student loans:

    Income Percentile (%)  Percentage with Student Loans   Percentage of 25-40 with Student Loans
    0-9.9                  14.0%                           26.6%
    10-19.9                13.7%                           30.6%
    20-29.9                17.4%                           36.3%
    30-39.9                19.8%                           32.2%
    40-49.9                24.8%                           49.1%
    50-59.9                25.7%                           45.2%
    60-69.9                24.0%                           49.2%
    70-79.9                29.9%                           47.3%
    80-89.9                27.0%                           44.9%
    90-94.9                24.5%                           34.2%
    95-98.9                10.7%                           18.1%
    99-100                  8.2%                           45.0%
https://dqydj.com/average-student-loan-debt-united-states/

I'd say those distributions show a pretty broadly "middle-class" millennial issue, with a lot of overlap.


The forgiveness was not targeted at people who struggle to pay back their loans. It was a blanket forgiveness with a very high income ceiling. I would have qualified for it and I qualify for essentially no other kind of government subsidy. But it kind of had to be a high ceiling to have the desired political impact, because it targets people who attended college, which is a demographic that skews affluent.

Your numbers are exactly what I'm talking about. That distribution is middle to upper middle class skewed.

I might have been more supportive of it with a lower income cap. But I still think improving the income based repayment program - which I just read is one of Biden's new proposals! - is a much better way to do this without it being regressive.


Blanket forgiveness has a much higher likelihood of being accepted. Means testing is a great way to kill programs.

Also 75th percentile income is only $88k which is certainly not upper middle class wages these days, and that is right around where the distribution of money/household gets a bit fatter. "Middle class" isn't really 50th percentile any more these days.


I agree, but that political calculus doesn't impact my personal assessment of whether I think it's a good policy.

> "Middle class" isn't really 50th percentile any more these days.

I don't get it, why not? It does seem to be true that everyone from like the 25th to the 95th percentile thinks they are "middle class". But I don't buy it.


Because of the Gini index and rising wealth and income inequality.

Although 95th percentilers do all like to claim they have middle class values and were all self-made millionaires. Doesn't change the fact that the middle class is getting hollowed out.


I'm struggling a bit to put two and two together here. Maybe it would help if you could tell me what you think "middle class" should mean. And I think because it has come up in this thread as well, also where "upper middle class" is.

I think the obvious thing to do is to define it by income percentiles, but you don't seem happy with that (or maybe you just disagree on what the floor and ceiling of the percentiles should be?), and I'm open to the idea that something else matters more.


I think it's non-obvious how this would affect the overall economy. Say you spend $1,000 on loan repayment. That means you spend $1,000 less on other goods. BUT the government now gets $1,000 more income. They need to tax $1,000 less and thus someone else spends $1,000 more on other goods. Thus the net effect is neutral. Of course this is a simple analysis but it shows that it's not straightforward to know what the effects are.

Except the government spending isn’t really connected to taxation. The government spends what it spends and collects taxes for what it levy’s taxes for. It borrows any shortfalls without much afterthought. For any working age adults alive, it’s been very rare we’ve not run a federal deficit.

[flagged]

Biden's legal justification for student debt forgiveness was the 2003 Hero's Act, which allowed the Secretary of Education to discharge student loans debt in times of national emergency (like a Pandemic).

Trump cited this enabling law when he halted student loan payments.

The Supreme Court, invented a new legal theory called the "major questions doctrine" they self-cited as justification to end this policy. The Supreme Court is not a King either, though clearly they want to be.


[flagged]

This action was taken before the emergency was over, it's simply taken this long to go through the courts.

The Republican Supreme Court ruled against this because it is not simpatico with their pollical beliefs.

The statutory authority for Biden's actions is there, that doesn't matter because black-letter law and jurisprudence don't matter anymore, only conservative political outcomes.


Politically this was an interesting ride for Biden. He held it out as a carrot to buy votes in 2022 and the SCOTUS bails him out of actually paying the bill (with our tax dollars...). For sure it'll be part of the 2024 campaign that they need total filibuster proof Democrat control of Congress to get it pushed through.

The entire nationalizing of the student loan program was a long con (as part of the Affordable Care Act no less!). It originated with a message of, "We'll save costs by cutting out the middle men!". That was a complete charade as the goal from day one was to take control of the debt so that it could be selectively discharged.

Thankfully Trump's 2016 win has cemented a conservative SCOTUS for the near future and they put a stop to this nonsense. Regardless of the outcome of 2024, that's going to his most lasting impact on the country.


If I recall correctly the financial crisis caused issues with funding for student loan issuance. Cutting out the middlemen was a bonus.

> Regardless of the outcome of 2024, that's going to his most lasting impact on the country.

No. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/January_6_United_States_Capito... This is will be his most lasting impact on the country or maybe https://www.pbs.org/newshour/politics/donald-trump-says-hes-...


I kind of agree with both of you. Both this Supreme Court and the insurrection will be the historical legacy of his presidency. But I think over time Mitch McConnell's name will be the one in the history books when talking about the latter years of the Roberts Court.

Maybe also the thing about doing crimes after leaving office and getting charged for them will set a new precedent. Though I think mostly future ex-presidents will just do the speaking tour thing instead of doing crime.


Kagan's dissent regarding the standing of Missouri was fantastic. I am not a lawyer, but she seemed to clearly cut through every argument for hearing the case offered by the majority. MOHELA is not financially tied to Missouri; states cannot sue on behalf of their citizens; the SC of MO ruled against Missouri's obligations to a very similar entity (MOHEFA) when MO was sued over those obligations (and Missouri, presumably since it was the defendant, repudiated such ties in that case!).

Her case on the merits was... less convincing. I'm not convinced she's wrong, but I'm not convinced she's right. I have more thoughts, but they're long, and would distract from what I made this comment for. Nonetheless, having shown her case on standing, we do not need the merits.

What is surprising (and disappointing) is that SCOTUS here seemed to have abandoned its usual (good) policy of steadfastly restricting what it has the responsibility to rule on.


You can't not view the standing question together with the standing for the discrimination case, where the court ruled that the possibility of prior restraint that the government had not undertaken, over actions the plaintiff had not taken, in a business that they had not started, constituted an actionable tort/harm that gave plaintiffs standing.

The court is now allowing hypothetical harms, pre-crime. And the worst part is, we know that's not going to be evenly applied.

The old regime is being swept away, this is now The Terrors, where different groups of people receive a different process with a pre-determined outcome based on which group you fall into.

Even if you didn't like the court before, everyone got the same process, and that's different now. Nobody is even pretending there's any legal basis to these standings anymore. If you're in the right group, you can sue over harm to a business you didn't even start yet. You can sue for damage to someone else's business that you're not even a party to (as Missouri did).


The problem is that if you paid for college by your parents not fixing the leaky roof, living in a bad neighborhood, and choosing a worse college that didn't cost so much, you wouldn't get a refund the same way that someone who paid for it by a loan did. If you suffer now, tough luck; if you delay the suffering, you may get bailed out.

Presumably, if you got out of college without student debt, you were better able to take the wages from your career and do things like fix a roof, move to a better neighborhood, and save for your children's education.

I graduated from my university with a fraction of the average debt taken on by students at said university; I will be happy to contribute my taxes towards supporting those not as fortunate, and the economy would benefit as a result.


If you let your roof leak so you could pay for college, you graduated, and you eventually fixed the roof, that's strictly worse than fixing the roof immediately and getting a loan instead, graduating, and having your loans forgiven. The person who scrimped and saved had a leaky roof for many years and the person who took out a loan didn't.

(And leaky roofs are just a metonym. College is pretty expensive, and paying for it drastically reduces most people's quality of life in a way that's much bigger than leaky roofs, and much harder to shrug off.)


The supreme court has been in the news a lot lately, and every time I see it I think about Wickard v Filburn where the courts decided that someone growing their own food on their own land to feed to their own farm animals was participating in "interstate commerce". Amongst all the rulings and changes to longstanding rights, this ruling still stands: if you grow a plant inside your house for your own use, you're participating in "interstate commerce" and can thus be regulated federal government.

(I realize the supreme court is only ruling on the cases that come before them, so this is a criticism of the entire legal system rather than just the supreme court.)

[0]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wickard_v._Filburn


As an interesting adjunct to that, the entire DEA and federal controlled substances register rests on the legal theory defined by Wickard [1], and was unfortunately affirmed in 2005 by Gonzales v. Raich [2].

There's no Constitutional authority granted to the federal government for controlled substance enforcement, this power was questionably seized by a convoluted interpretation of the interstate commerce clause that has its roots in Wikard.

If that case were to be overturned, controlled substances would be defined and enforced at the state level, and a DEA-like federal agency would act in a purely advisory role (similar to the intent of the DOE).

Most states currently use the federal controlled substances register to define their own enforcement. In fact, Texas and Florida just got burned by this because the feds loosened the restrictions on hemp-derived THC. Texas and Florida both tried to ban the sale of delta-8 etc... but lost their cases in court because the law states that the controlled substances rule flows the federal rules, so they can't ban it administratively (they have to actually go through the effort of changing the law, and it's not a winning issue politically).

[1] https://nationalaffairs.com/publications/detail/this-is-your...

[2] https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/545/1/


Justification:

> The Court decided that Filburn's wheat-growing activities reduced the amount of wheat he would buy for animal feed on the open market, which is traded nationally, is thus interstate, and is therefore within the scope of the Commerce Clause. Although Filburn's relatively small amount of production of more wheat than he was allotted would not affect interstate commerce itself, the cumulative actions of thousands of other farmers like Filburn would become substantial. Therefore the Court decided that the federal government could regulate Filburn's production.


A terrible justification indeed. It moved the bar of responsibility to the impacts of your actions, to the impacts of your inaction.

Yes it's quite a bad decision. Interstate commerce shouldn't mean "any commerce" but that's how they now interpret it. They might as well say that since breathing affects the motion of air which could affect businesses using wind power around the country that it is subject to "interstate commerce" restrictions.

(This also means Congress wouldn't be able to pass laws around workplace regulation, minimum wages, etc. for any business that operates within one state.)


The universities are first and foremost responsible for this situation, especially their predatory Masters’ programs that cost several arms and legs and offer little to no improvement in one’s career marketability.

Make student loans dischargeable in bankruptcy, and allow creditors to pursue the universities for repayment. Spending $100,000 you can’t easily pay back for a useless degree is foolish, but nobody should have been allowed to sell a product like that in the first place.


Universities are the culprit, 100%. Classes students so not need, excessive labs and exploratory requirements, and an ungodly amount of fees. Universities should be liable for these loans.

I, for one, am thankful that universities serve a broader education purpose than being glorified trade schools. There is intrinsic value in a well-educated populace, beyond "learn to code, lol".

An English literature degree in 1960 cost about a tenth of what it does today, in inflation-adjusted terms. Somehow, those students learned just fine. Nobody would be complaining about liberal arts degrees if universities weren’t profiteering off credentialism. But if your degree costs as much as a small house, it better lead to a damn good paying job.

What Masters' programs are you referring to?

I think this is one thing both side agrees on, although both side disagrees on the effect. It would basically mean heavily reducing seats for humanities and social sciences. And increasing seats for technicians and programming majors.

Biden must really like this decision. He has never really supported large scale forgiveness and does want repayments to start again. This gives him the political cover to restart payments without upsetting his base.

However, the Supreme Court appears to be hellbent to limit government powers in all areas other than those related to police powers, military, and foreign affairs. With an end to effective federalism as it pertains to domestic policy I think it will soon be apparent to everyone that the Constitution needs a rewrite. The structural representation imbalances will eventually necessitate a change of some sort. SCOTUS is doing what it can to make everyone aware of this.


Why would the Constitution need a rewrite? The several states are capable of defining their own education finance policies. There was no need for the Federal government to be involved in the first place.

There is no proportional representation in Congress or for votes for President. Congress and the Supreme Court no longer operate in a way conducive to this state of affairs. The Constitution badly needs a rewrite. What worked in a 1800 no longer works today.

Our country seems to be doing fine overall. What specifically are problems that need to be addressed?

The distribution of power is grossly unfair. North Dakota’s Representative represents far fewer people than one from California. The two Senators from there represent far fewer people than the ones from California. Since California and North Dakota have very much different views on the role and purpose of government this power imbalance will become acute in the coming years.

The country is not doing fine. The majority view on abortion, guns, education, policing, etc. are being thwarted by low population states. The will of the people is not being done. Whenever a Democrat gets elected President state legislators in Texas threaten secession. Eventually California and other liberal states will think this is a good idea. I for one no longer wish to subsidize backwards Mississippi.


> Biden must really like this decision. He has never really supported large scale forgiveness and does want repayments to start again.

Yes, that’s why he immediately launched the process to redo debt relief this time under HEA rather than HEROES authority before the ink was dry on the ruling, just announced a payment on-ramp that reduces the impact of failure to pay after the Congressionally-mandated end of the pause, and has used other regulatory authority to launch a new income-based repayment program which will lead to $0 payments for low-income student loan debtors.


The impression I’ve had is that he is against broad forgiveness and does want repayments to start again. It’s been a political minefield in that he doesn’t want to piss off his base. It appears my impression is wrong but I do believe he wants repayments to start again. Note though that the $10,000 forgiveness is less than what he campaigned on.

We should not confuse, in general, new program initiatives as an indication that this is what the politician proposing the initiative wants. Sometimes proposals have to be made to appease the base.


> The impression I’ve had is that he is against broad forgiveness and does want repayments to start again.

Okay, but what is the basis for this impression?

> Note though that the $10,000 forgiveness is less than what he campaigned on.

The $10,000-$20,000 foregiveness plan (with an income cap) is less universal the “at least” $10,000 he called on Congress to provide all borrowers during the campaign, as President-elect after the campaign, and sought (but was rebuffed on) as President in the stimulus bill. It's what he thought he could justify as executive action under HEROES (and even that turned out to be wrong), not what he wanted.

> We should not confuse, in general, new program initiatives as an indication that this is what the politician proposing the initiative wants.

Absent specific, articulable, evidence-based reasons to believe otherwise, we certainly should take them as exactly that, especially when they keep coming back with different approaches when rebuffed.

> Sometimes proposals have to be made to appease the base.

Yes, but the claim that any particular proposal is merely a sop to the base should be backed by evidence; the fact that it is sometimes true does not, by itself, support ascribing that basis to any particular policy proposal.


I agreed that I was wrong. I think you missed that part.

Absent specific, articulable, evidence-based reasons to believe otherwise, we certainly should take them as exactly that, especially when they keep coming back with different approaches when rebuffed.

No. This is way too impractical. You yourself don’t follow this criteria. I suggest you read up on hunches, gut feelings, and things like that.

Give you an example. It was always clear that Republican politicians, as a whole, didn’t want to get rid of Obamacare because Obamacare was a Republican plan all along. They blustered and said they’d get rid of it but when they had control of both houses and the Presidency they didn’t get rid of it. I can’t point to a specific thing that gave me the impression they would not actually get rid of it but I was certain they wouldn’t follow through.

People, especially politicians, can’t be taken at their word just because one doesn’t have specific, articulable, evidence based reasons. If you really operate in real life this way then you are a dupe.


> No. This is way too impractical. You yourself don’t follow this criteria.

Yes, I do.

> I suggest you read up on hunches, gut feelings, and things like that.

They are very good aids in deciding when to expend more effort looking for facts, they aren’t on their own a great basis for conclusions and even less for public arguments for those conclusions.

> It was always clear that Republican politicians, as a whole, didn’t want to get rid of Obamacare because Obamacare was a Republican plan all along.

See, that's a specific, articulable reason for the belief that it was an insincere desire. (A bad one, IMO, and one which is counterindicated not only by specific other evidence regarding the mechanics by which they sought to destroy it, but also by the fact that it wasn’t a Republican plan, and by the specific times and contexts similar, but different, plans had been embraced by Republicans, and by the plans Republicans, and the industry from whom the similar plans once embraced by Republicans had gotten the plans in the first place, had moved on to in the interim, but that's a whole different argument.)

> People, especially politicians, can’t be taken at their word

Substantive policy actions are different than mere words.


Your understanding of how people ought to make conclusions and operate in the world is deeply flawed. No one, including you, has the time and means to find the level of specificity you seem to require in order to decide what their impressions are in terms of the motives of other people.

Republicans during Obama’s Presidency many times passed legislation to dismantle the ACA. They did so knowing he would veto the bills. He did so. When they gained both houses of Congress and the Presidency they didn’t dismantle it. The ACA is still around. They have no replacement idea for it because it’s already their idea.

We won’t agree on anything. You consider minor differences between Romneycare and what the Heritage Foundation proposed on the 90s to what was implemented by the ACA sufficient to conclude that the ACA wasn’t a Republican idea. It’s like saying a car’s color isn’t red because it’s ruby red and not perfectly, exactly red. This isn’t how reasoned discourse is done. No amount of nitpicking will dissuade an objective person from thinking that Obamacare is close enough to Romneycare to qualify for the label of a Republican idea.

I’ve noticed over the years that you engage in this tactic quite often. Someone talks at a general level and your response is to nitpick at the fine details. It’s as if you don’t understand how language is used in everyday conversation. You are like the people who say the Soviet Union wasn’t communist because they never implemented true communism. They ignore how the word was used in normal colloquially. While it was never truly communist it is correct to say that it was a communist nation.

Substantive policy actions are different than mere words.

This is naivety in the extreme. Republicans passed legislation to allow 9/11 victims to sue Saudi Arabia. Obama signed it. Then McConnel blamed Obama for signing it. Political grandstanding happens.

I’ve been on this site since the beginning. I create a new account periodically. We gone back and forth several times. I will never respond to you again.


Imagine ignoring long held precedent over standing in order to score political points against the President

I am surprised to see this case had standing given the claim that financial harm was had due to only receiving $10,000 in relief instead of the full $20,000 by a borrower. Does anyone have better legal insight that can explain to me why the case was ruled on at all?

That case (Board of Education v. Brown) was unanimously rejected for lack of standing. It was the other one (Biden v. Nebraska) that was decided.

https://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/22pdf/22-535_i3kn.pdf https://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/22pdf/22-506_nmip.pdf


College graduates on average have higher lifetime earnings than non-college graduates, and inherently have an advantage over non-graduates in a competitive job market:

https://www.ssa.gov/policy/docs/research-summaries/education...

And the people taking these loans out aren't poor:

https://www.brookings.edu/articles/who-owes-the-most-in-stud...

>Recently released data from the Federal Reserve’s Survey of Consumer Finances confirm that upper-income households account for a disproportionate share of student loan debt—and an even larger share of monthly out-of-pocket student debt payments.

>The highest-income 40 percent of households (those with incomes above $74,000) owe almost 60 percent of the outstanding education debt and make almost three-quarters of the payments. The lowest-income 40 percent of households hold just under 20 percent of the outstanding debt and make only 10 percent of the payments. It should be no surprise that higher-income households owe more student debt than others. Students

So it's unclear to me why these people in particular deserve debt relief, especially when you consider the non-graduates, who are at a marked competitive disadvantage, and have debt of their own, will indirectly be subsidizing it. The "so they can finally afford to buy a home" meme would make more sense if the non-graduates had an easier time buying a home, yet they're even less likely to be able to afford a home:

https://corridorbusiness.com/study-college-graduates-more-li...

The college-educated now form a powerful voting block, one that was crucial to Biden's victory:

https://www.nytimes.com/2021/09/08/us/politics/how-college-g...

and this whole movement feels like privileged, upwardly-mobile people voting themselves a handout they don't deserve, with money that could be much better spent helping actual poor people make ends meet


Why isn’t this on the front page? 100+ comments and it’s not there?

Probably flame war'd.

Do any HN constitutional scholars or lawyers who work in adjacent fields have any comments on the ruling? Having only read the introduction (which by definition is not a comprehensive argument, so I acknowledge that I'm drawing conclusions based on an incomplete understanding of the ruling), my intuition tells me the standing sub-decision could be abused by states, and the textually oriented picking-apart of the SecEdu's stance struck me as - forgive my ignorance, but - arbitrary and borderline petulant.

FWIW, I'm _not_ interested in discussing this from a socio-political standpoint. I'm just curious to hear opinions about the ruling from a legal perspective.


From a legal perspective it seems pretty clear there was a lack of standing

Really interesting reading both sides of this argument, but I do see something missing from the entire conversation (unless someone snuck it in and I missed it):

Independent from the side you take on this, this decision was made by the judicial branch in the context of (hopefully) the constitution. If you disagree with the decision, there's a process (albeit a long one (on purpose)) to change our system, but that process resides in the legislative body, not the judiciary.

I encourage folks from both sides of the argument to keep that in mind.


If Congress had forgiven the debt then we wouldn't be having this discussion. They obviously have the power to do that if they choose.

Can someone who understands law tell me if I'm correct?

SCOTUS said in a brief that a plain text reading of the HEROES act gave the administrative branch this power [1]. So, SCOTUS has invoked the Major Questions Doctrine (which I think the current court invented?), and through that, decided that this was too much power for the administrative branch to have? Is this a correct understanding of what has happened here?

[1] https://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/22/22-506/251435/2023...


This is a brief, not the ruling of the court.

Major questions doctrine is older than (most of) the current Court, e.g. see MCI Telecommunications Corp. v. AT&T Co. from 1994.


> This is a brief, not the ruling of the court.

I'm aware, but in the brief they said that a plain text reading of the HEROES act gave the president this power. Since it's a brief is that meaningless? I don't really know how briefs are created.

And I wasn't aware the doctrine existed before, thanks. Though apparently the term was never used in a majority opinion until this court.


Briefs are submitted to the court by parties involved in the litigation before the court even hears oral arguments on the case. They are one-sided arguments, not holdings of the court.

That brief is written by the Biden administration. The Biden administration argued that a plain text reading of the HEROES act gave the president this power. The majority ruling by SCOTUS did not agree.

From Justice Kagan’s dissent: “Wielding its judicially manufactured heightened-specificity requirement, the Court refuses to acknowledge the plain words of the HEROES Act.” (p. 28)

So Justice Kagan would agree that a plain text reading would give the administration the power to forgive outstanding loan balances. However, the majority’s ruling was that the “text of the HEROES Act does not authorize the Secretary’s loan forgiveness program.” (p. 3)


Legal | privacy