Home Education If we don’t act quickly, the student loan default system could plunge more families into poverty

If we don’t act quickly, the student loan default system could plunge more families into poverty

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For too long, the dream of pursuing a college degree has turned into a nightmare of loan default for millions of students. Like the well-documented effects of traffic fines and court fees, the penalties resulting from federal student loan default plunge too many Americans deeper into financial instability, perpetuating rather than helping to resolve the vicious cycle of poverty. It is especially abhorrent that a government program intended to create equitable opportunities for all students instead perpetuates racial and economic gaps in financial stability and mobility.

In response to the Covid-19 crisis, the federal government paused student loan payments, interest and collections in March 2020 and recently extended that pause until May 2022. The Education Department also recently announced that default-related seizures of tax refunds and other federal benefit payments will be halted an additional six months after repayment resumes. While this reprieve is critical, if the Education Department fails to provide more permanent protections, millions of borrowers are at risk of economic upheaval when it ends in November.

Even before the pandemic, far too many Americans were struggling to manage their student loan debt: At the start of 2020, one-quarter of Direct Loan borrowers were either behind on payments or in default, and over a million borrowers entered default in 2019 alone. Default disproportionately affects Black and first-generation students, and most of those who experience default entered college from a low-income background.

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