President Joe Biden on Tuesday launched a promotional blitz for his new program that helps student loan borrowers repay their debt, just weeks before millions of Americans are set to receive a loan bill for the first time since the beginning of the pandemic.

The Biden administration is mobilizing to convince borrowers across the country to sign up for the new income-driven repayment program — dubbed the “SAVE plan” — which caps interest accrual and lowers the monthly payment amount for many borrowers.

“It’s the most affordable student loan plan ever,” Biden said in a video released by the White House on Tuesday, describing the program as a major reform to a student loan system “that hurt borrowers for much too long.”

“If you’re eligible for the SAVE Plan, sign up now so you can lower your monthly payments in advance of payments resuming this fall,” Biden said.

  • @Krauerking@lemy.lol
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    362 years ago

    Honestly whatever on the whole repayment thing cause I’m poor and fucked no matter what so… Meh.

    But seriously can we fucking stop pretending the poverty line is real or even close to where they say it is? When every single benefits package and plan talks about a 200% increase from base poverty line or $20,000 over the base poverty limit for approval it just means poverty is much more common and a lot more expensive than we want to admit but it would freak out hundreds of thousands to realize just how poor they actually are.

    Rip off the bandaid of bullshit poverty line adjustments and just be honest that the average American is low class now.

    • Billiam
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      62 years ago

      Yeah, the “temporarily embarrassed millionaires” probably don’t want to know how embarrassed they actually are, or how permanent “temporarily” is.

  • wrath-sedan
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    292 years ago

    This article doesn’t really say what the SAVE plan does so I’m reposting this here.

    …the SAVE plan is coming in July 2024 to replace REPAYE, with some parts rolling out this summer and all the details here.

    The department says that under the old plan, borrowers repaid $10,956 for every $10,000 they borrowed. Under the new plan, they would pay back just $6,121.

    It’s more technical than direct forgiveness but will change income-based plans in the following ways according to this NPR article:

    Starting Summer 2023:

    • floor for protected income rising from 150% to 225% of poverty line
    • no interest while payments are being made

    Starting Summer 2024:

    • payments now based on 5% rather than 10% of borrowers’ remaining income
    • those who borrow $12,000 or less can gain full forgiveness in 10 years rather than 20 (with each additional $1000 adding another year so $13,000=11 years etc.)

    It’s a start, hopefully someone sees this and saves some money.

    Also want to add that these changes are not subject to Congressional approval. They could be repealed (impossible with a Dem Senate) or they could be struck down by SCOTUS, but this is all being performed via powers given by the Higher Education Act and are generally on much firmer legal ground than the loan forgiveness plan SCOTUS scuttled.

      • @Jackolantern@lemmy.world
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        42 years ago

        Oh man that’s great! This is not the complete loan forgiveness I had hoped for but it’s a start and I hope lots more benefit from this especially the ones who needed it the most.

      • Flying Squid
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        42 years ago

        I’m so happy for you! I’m going to see if we can bring down my wife’s grad school loan payments. They may not apply.

        • @Mikey_donuts@lemmy.world
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          22 years ago

          Thank you! My loans are from law school and they qualified so definitely give it a shot. Good luck to you and your wife!

  • @bedo6776@lemmy.world
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    102 years ago

    The plan would decrease my payments by about $20/mo and would increase the total amount I would pay. Doesn’t seem like it saves me anything. I’m better off continuing to pay my previous minimum payment and pay the loans off early.

    I wish they would eliminate/lower the interest rate.

    • @Telodzrum@lemmy.world
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      362 years ago

      Tell me you haven’t been paying attention at all without telling me you haven’t been paying attention at all.

          • Alto
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            92 years ago

            But that doesn’t go with the narrative!

            • Dr Cog
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              62 years ago

              Because Republicans blocked the debt relief, nobody got 20k. You really haven’t been paying attention, have you?

                • Dr Cog
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                  2 years ago

                  Russia: attacks Ukraine

                  Ukraine: attacks back

                  Tankies: wow, I can’t believe Ukraine would do this

          • @snipvoid@lemm.ee
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            32 years ago

            I sure do! Who said anything about Biden’s fault?

            It’s your fault, and your peers.

            Or perhaps you can tell me why you’ve decided that you’re happy living your life in crippling debt, desperately crossing your fingers for the branches of government to decide that they’ll finally afford you the very smallest crumbs of relief possible.

            How much above the FDIC insurance threshold of $250,000 did the individual accounts of Silicon Valley Bank get bailed out for again?

            Oh, and how much has been recovered for the $100+ billion balance of PPP loan fraud?

            Curious.

              • @snipvoid@lemm.ee
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                12 years ago

                What have people historically done when their government exists for the benefit of the aristocracy/oligarchs/billionaires while the people suffer, starve, and drown in poverty?

                • Flying Squid
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                  12 years ago

                  Sorry, was supposed to personally go and assassinate Biden? That’s what you’re saying I was supposed to do?

                • @ZombieTheZombieCat@lemm.ee
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                  02 years ago

                  Proletariat revolution only works when all or most people are on board. One or a few people doing it will just land them in jail basically. This system is structured so that if we do something like that, we will be on the street within a month or two and not be able to care for our families. Please don’t make assumptions about the situations that millions of Americans are trapped in. Especially if it is not something you’ve lived under yourself, or aren’t formally educated in. They don’t call it “manufactured consent” for nothing. We’re born into it and we have to participate in it if we want to survive. Literally.

  • @givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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    52 years ago

    It’s still not thru congress yet, and the part Biden brags about wouldn’t even start till next summer…

    I’ll be surprised if any of it materializes, but that won’t stop moderates from bragging about it.

  • GreenBottles
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    2 years ago

    the current brand new super great SAVE repayment plan that I have access to literally increases my payment by $100 a month

  • GodlessCommie
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    52 years ago

    No one actually thought that the guy who exempted student debt from bankruptcy and is owned by the same billionaires that own Republicans was gonna do what he said?

  • @cyd@lemmy.world
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    42 years ago

    This is (i) welfare for the well-to-do, (ii) great incentive for colleges to keep pushing up their tuition fees, and (iii) fiscal stimulus during a critical juncture in the fight to tame inflation. Let it not be said that the Republican Party has a monopoly on bad policy ideas.

    • @Wrench@lemmy.world
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      122 years ago

      Ah yes, student loans are all the rage down at the country club. Won’t you be a good chap and bring me my balance statement, of which I will light my Cuban with.

      • @SCB@lemmy.world
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        2 years ago

        People with college degrees, on average, make a million more lifetime dollars than people without. This goes up further with post-graduate education.

        Student loan forgiveness should always irst be targeted at college dropouts. Tiering it based on income is not. AS good but is a close 2nd

    • @ImFresh3x@sh.itjust.works
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      52 years ago

      I disagree with you, but your position has some sentiments I can understand. So instead of getting angry, downvoting, and throwing a fit, I am just going to respond calmly:

      If you look at the actual details of the plan it’s pretty reasonable.

      Lowered interest rates for everyone who are making their payments.

      Higher threshold for low income earners to get some forgiveness. This counters your “well-to-do” argument.

    • @thecodemonk@programming.dev
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      52 years ago

      Explain how you came up with point one. The well to do will not qualify or benefit from this at all. Its based on income and is definitely skewed to benefit well off people at all.

      • @cyd@lemmy.world
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        2 years ago

        College graduates receive a big wage premium; over a lifetime, average earnings of graduates exceed those of nongraduates by about $1M. Yes, people who just graduated may not be earning high incomes today, but project things out over decades and it’s clear this is not the group in need of support.

        In fact, given the magic of compound interest, we would expect a college loan forgiveness programme to greatly increase the net financial position of graduates versus nongraduates, on top of what the graduate earnings premium already achieves. Hence increasing the overall level of wealth inequality in the country.

    • @Coffeemonkepants@lemmy.world
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      42 years ago

      Not sure how you decided this seeing as this benefits people at the poverty line and not the wealthy. Sure, anything can encourage schools to push up tuition prices, but there’s literally a bill in play right now to cap tuition prices. It’s not loan forgiveness, but it’s far better than nothing. Also, the financial impact is a pittance. It’s not the 50k per borrower floated in 2020. It’s not even the 10k the scotus shot down.

    • Flying Squid
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      32 years ago

      My parents were/are (Mom’s still alive) well-to-do. I was lucky in that I didn’t have to take out student loans. No one is giving me welfare.

      My wife, on the other hand, could sure use some relief from the student loan debt she incurred because her family is not the privileged one mine is.

      We’re fiscally responsible. We pay our bills on time. We have a fixed-rate mortgage. We have two cars, but one is paid off.

      We’re in our mid-40s and she still has a ton of student loan debt. That’s insanity.

      • @SCB@lemmy.world
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        12 years ago

        Sounds like you have plenty of money but only pay the minimum payments on her loans, which is a questionable choice at best.

        • Flying Squid
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          22 years ago

          It may sound like that, but that would be false. We live paycheck-to-paycheck like a majority of Americans.

          We pay what we can afford to pay.

          Believe it or not, people who grow up with wealthy parents aren’t necessarily wealthy themselves.

          • @Cryophilia@lemmy.world
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            12 years ago

            Dude you have a mortgage. You are not paycheck to paycheck, you have assets you can pull equity from at any time. You may not be saving cash but you are saving assets.

            You are not poor.

            Let me say that again.

            YOU ARE NOT POOR.

            Tired of all these upper middle class people pretending like they’re lining up at food banks. You’re good, dude. You made it. You are doing better than most. You don’t need relief. You know who needs relief? The dude who never had the opportunity to go to college in the first place and is making $20,000 a year.

            • Flying Squid
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              I never said I was poor. But going into more debt would make us poor.

              I’m certainly not upper middle class.

                • Flying Squid
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                  32 years ago

                  Nowadays? We bought it 10 years ago. In a depressed small city with high unemployment. It’s also only worth about $200,000. You know how low that is for a house right now?

                  Maybe don’t make assumptions.

    • Semi-Hemi-Demigod
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      22 years ago

      You’re wrong about (i) and (iii) - seriously who does that? - but as someone whose kids will be starting college in a few years I agree with (ii).

      We need to find a way to get everyone who is capable a college education without needing loans. Apart from my own personal interests, there is a huge amount of brain power wasted by not having education freely available.

      • @Cryophilia@lemmy.world
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        12 years ago

        You’re wrong about (i) and (iii) - seriously who does that?

        I’m confused. Are you saying this is not welfare for the well to do, and is not a form of stimulus?

  • Saw an article earlier today that over 60% of borrowers are planning to boycott repayment. I still haven’t setup an account since my loan got transferred to a new servicer. Seriously considering making them come garnish my wages or something. If enough people do it, the system will almost certainly collapse. I can’t imagine all the servicers trying to go through the garnishment process with that many people.

    • @Wrench@lemmy.world
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      242 years ago

      That… seems like a self destructive plan that will only accomplish ruining your credit score for 7 years

      • Own a home, have a pretty new car, don’t plan on moving anytime soon. Could come up with enough cash to pay for anything I need pretty easily and already have lots of established credit. I’m older and stable.

          • @CryptoRoberto@sh.itjust.works
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            112 years ago

            Yup, i can. Its almost like I’d be joining in as a form of protest for those who can’t. Weird to have solidarity and sympathy for others right?

            • @Wrench@lemmy.world
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              132 years ago

              I don’t see that as helping anyone. You’re protesting from a point of privilege. Those that aren’t can be seriously financially harmed by following your example.

              It’s like throwing the first stone at a peaceful protest when your daddy is powerful and can get you out of consequences.

            • BraveSirZaphod
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              72 years ago

              Personally, if I loaned someone a thousand dollars, they were perfectly capable of paying me back, but said that they would be withholding the payment out of solidarity, I’d be rather annoyed.

              But hey, if you wanna publicly announce to lenders that your word is meaningless, that’s your call. Certainly hope you don’t wind up in an unexpected bind.

              Also, chasing payment from delinquent debtors is a cost that simply gets shifted on to everyone else in the form of higher interest rates on the people who actually are honest, so you’re not doing the poor the service you think you are.

              • @ZombieTheZombieCat@lemm.ee
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                12 years ago

                We’re really caring about student loan servicers’ feelings? Like Nelnet? If that’s what they want to do, then it does show solidarity regardless of how privileged they may be.

              • Yes but if we are pretending: now pretend you’re a government that provides services to its citizens. As in, making profit from interest of education loans is counterproductive and undermines the purpose of getting citizens educated.

                • BraveSirZaphod
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                  12 years ago

                  From what I saw, briefly looking around, the interest rate is a fair bit lower for government loans than private ones, and when you add in inflation and administrative costs, I could imagine the actual profit margin on public loans being relatively low. Regardless though, I strongly agree with the fundamental point that investments in education are generally a really good use of government money.

                  That said, subsidizing demand like that does give universities a lot of leeway to dramatically increase costs (as well as giving state governments cover to slash funding to state universities). Additionally, given that university graduates go on to make quite a lot more money than non-grads - even if the first several years out can be a bit rough dealing with loan payments - throwing them even more money isn’t exactly the most progressive use of tax funds if you’re aiming to help the poor. I’d much much rather graduates who are actually able to re-pay their loans, even if it involves a bit of belt-tightening for a bit, to do that so that that money can be used to help fund education costs for more people who truly need it. The median student loan debt is about the same as the median cost of attending a public university for one year, so every person that decides to just not pay their debt back is one less student in true need of assistance that won’t be able to go to college. It’s more than reasonable for people who benefited from loans to help fund the next wave of students, and doing so makes the financials much much more scalable and sustainable.