Biden doesn't want to fight for 50,000 student loan relief. It's too hard

Man that is HuGE!!!!! That's almost a $200 savings....An extra $173 over 1 year is like $2000 that can go somewhere else....
Yup. For me personally, over the pandemic I really got my finances in order (investing/saving more and budgeting like a mofo). So whether it's windfalls or fixed costs I've designed shit so it's way easier to shift things around accordingly.

I had a $400 payment baked into my budget beginning 10/1, so it's a relief to be able to cut that down and allocate that extra cash elsewhere.
 

Student Loan Forgiveness Update as Mohela Forcing Repayments Sparks Fury​

BY GIULIA CARBONARO ON 9/22/23 AT 11:20 AM EDT




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Student Loan Forgiveness Update As Mohela Forcing Repayments Sparks Fury
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U.S.STUDENT LOAN DEBTSTUDENT LOAN FORGIVENESSJOE BIDEN

Agroup of six Democratic lawmakers called on the Education Department to investigate student loan company Mohela's customer service, saying that paperwork delays caused by the business might force student loan borrowers eligible for debt relief to enter repayment.
St. Louis-based Mohela (short for Missouri Higher Education Loan Authority) is one of the biggest student loan companies in the entire country servicing both federal and private student loans by collecting and tracking payments.
Since November last year, Mohela has been the only company servicing borrowers enrolling in the Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF), a federal program that encourages students to enter potentially low-paid careers in the public sector—like teaching, nursing, firefighting, or the military—by forgiving their remaining student debt after 120 monthly payments made while working for the government or a nonprofit organization.

The 120 monthly payments are the equivalent of approximately 10 years. The program only applies to those who qualify and enroll in it.
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On Thursday, a group of six Democrats led by Senator Bob Menendez of New Jersey sent a letter to Education Secretary Miguel Cardona asking for the department to investigate paperwork delays at Mohela involving borrowers enrolled in the PSLF.
In the letter, the six lawmakers—Senators Menedez, Elizabeth Warren, Angus King, Alex Padilla, Ed Markey and Cory Booker—wrote that borrowers with Mohela had complained of long waiting times before getting in touch with customer service at the company, as well as problems receiving credit for the qualifying payments made toward the program.

Student loan debt

Student loan borrowers demonstrate at a rally outside of the Supreme Court, on June 30, 2023, in Washington, D.C. Six Democrats are calling on the Education Department to investigate Mohela.PAUL MORIGI/GETTY IMAGES FOR WE THE 45 MILLION
"Over the last few months, we have heard numerous concerns from public service borrowers as they prepare for the start of repayments," the lawmakers wrote.
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"Many borrowers report that they have not received credit for all of the qualifying payments they have made, have experienced long wait times when attempting to contact Mohela representatives for any type of assistance, and some borrowers who have been approved for forgiveness report long wait times to actually get the refunds to which they are entitled. In some cases, we are hearing that this process can take up to a year."
They added that "with the restart of repayments, these issues are likely to worsen for borrowers."
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The six Democrats called on Cardona to answer their questions about Mohela before October 1, the day student loan payments will resume for 40 million borrowers across the country.
"As the Department explores ways to ensure that borrowers are held harmless with the restart of repayments, it is vital that you not overlook these issues," they said.

"Borrowers who are eligible to have their debt canceled under the PSLF program should not be forced back into repayment due solely to Mohela's processing delays, which cause difficult financial situations for so many borrowers," they continued.
"The Administration assured public service workers across the country that the PSLF program would be fixed, yet Mohela appears to be continuing a legacy of lost paperwork, long call wait times, and processing errors and delays."
Newsweek reached out to Mohela via email for comment on Friday.
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Biden Administration Seeks End-Around to Student Loan Debt Cancellation​

The Education Department announced a new plan to provide debt cancellation for potentially five groups of student borrowers after broader loan forgiveness was halted by the Supreme Court.

By Lauren Camera
|
Sept. 29, 2023, at 1:19 p.m.
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Biden’s End-Around on Student Loan Debt
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[IMG alt="WASHINGTON, DC June 30, 2023: US President Joe Biden delivers remarks on the Supreme Court's decision on the Administration's student debt relief program in the Roosevelt Room of the White House on Friday, June 30, 2023. United States Secretary of Education Miguel Cardona was present for remarks. (Photo by Demetrius Freeman/The Washington Post via Getty Images)


"]https://www.usnews.com/object/image...e-time=1696007864955&size=responsive640[/IMG]
President Joe Biden speaks in the Roosevelt Room of the White House, while Education Secretary Miguel Cardona listens at left, June 30, 2023, in Washington, D.C. “The Biden-Harris Administration has taken unprecedented action to fix the broken student loan system and deliver record amounts of student debt relief,” Education Secretary Miguel Cardona said in a statement.DEMETRIUS FREEMAN/THE WASHINGTON POST/GETTY IMAGES)
The Biden administration is moving forward with a new path to provide large-scale student loan debt cancellation in the wake of a Supreme Court ruling this summer that struck down President Joe Biden’s controversial debt relief plan.
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White House Touts New Student Loan Plan
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The Education Department announced Friday that it’s set to begin the formal regulatory process in October to provide debt cancellation for potentially five groups of student loan borrowers – a lengthy process that involves a panel of negotiators who will meet over several months to try to reach a consensus.
The five groups of borrowers department officials are targeting include borrowers whose balances are greater than what they originally borrowed, borrowers whose loans first entered repayment decades ago, borrowers who attended programs that did not provide sufficient financial value, borrowers who are eligible for relief under programs like income-driven repayment but have not applied, and borrowers who have experienced financial hardship and need support but for whom the current student loan system does not adequately address.

“The Biden-Harris Administration has taken unprecedented action to fix the broken student loan system and deliver record amounts of student debt relief,” Education Secretary Miguel Cardona said in a statement. “Now, we are diligently moving through the regulatory process to advance debt relief for even more borrowers. Today, after considering more than 26,000 public comments on how to tailor this relief, we are releasing this additional information about this effort.”

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The 14-member panel will meet Oct. 10 and Oct. 11, and again in November and December before the Education Department issues its proposed changes to regulations in the Higher Education Act that would allow the loan cancellation. The public will have an opportunity to comment before those rules are finalized, which administration officials expect to occur as soon as spring of 2024.

“We want to explore what potential types of hardships borrowers face and how the department might deliver relief to those borrowers under the Higher Education Act,” Undersecretary James Kvaal told reporters on Friday. “We will also listen to the ideas brought forward by the negotiators.”
Notably, the announcement comes as student loan payments are scheduled to restart on Oct.1 for the first time since they were paused at the outset of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Despite the Supreme Court’s block of the president’s sweeping student loan cancellation plan earlier this summer, providing debt relief to borrowers has been one of the administration’s biggest policy wins during Biden’s first term – and one the Biden-Harris campaign is prepared to tout heading into the 2024 presidential election.
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Thousands to Receive Student Loan Relief

As it stands, the Education Department has approved $117 billion in relief to more than 3.4 million borrowers, including $39 billion for borrowers who were eligible for relief after fixing long-standing problems with income-driven repayment plans, $45.7 billion for borrowers who were eligible for relief after fixing long-standing problems with public service forgiveness plan, $10.5 billion for borrowers who became disabled, $22.4 billion for borrowers who were defrauded by their schools or whose schools suddenly closed without warning.
The news is the latest in a series of major higher education announcements by the Education Department this week, including the finalized rule for how for-profit colleges must prove their graduates are gainfully employed and earning enough to pay back their debt in order to be eligible to receive federal student aid, and a blueprint for colleges and universities seeking to continue using race in their admissions process in the wake of the Supreme Court ruling that barred the use of affirmative action.
 

Biden Administration Prepares for Student Debt Relief Negotiations​

A committee of 14 people representing student loan borrowers, higher education institutions and other stakeholder groups will kick off discussions about student loan forgiveness Oct. 10.
By Katherine Knott


President Biden stands at a podium next to Education Secretary Miguel Cardona

The Biden administration is planning to hold three two-day negotiating sessions over the next three months to discuss student loan forgiveness.
Alex Wong/Staff/Getty Images
The U.S. Education Department is gearing up to hold meetings in two weeks on how to provide debt relief to federal student loan borrowers, especially now that a potential government shutdown has been at least temporarily averted.
The Biden administration announced Friday who will serve on the advisory negotiated rule-making committee that will discuss how to change federal regulations to offer debt relief and offered a glimpse at what those discussions might look like. The announcement came a day before the potential shutdown, which Congress averted with a last-minute measure to keep the government open for 45 days. Student loan payments also resumed Sunday.
Zayn Siddique, deputy assistant to the president and deputy director of the White House Domestic Policy Council, on a call with reporters Friday morning, said the administration is committed to moving forward as fast as possible.
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Friday’s announcement marks the next step in a lengthy and complicated process that the Education Department has to go through to issue new rules or regulations. After the Supreme Court struck down President Biden’s plan to forgive up to $20,000 in federal student loans for eligible Americans, the administration moved forward on an alternative plan to provide relief.
The nine-step rule-making process began in earnest in July with a public comment period that included a four-hour public hearing. The department also received tens of thousands of written comments. After the hearing, the department solicited nominators for individuals to serve on the advisory committee and received about 200 nominations, officials said Friday. The department is still looking for alternate negotiators to represent two stakeholder groups: state officials and historically Black colleges and universities and other minority-serving institutions.
“Now, we are diligently moving through the regulatory process to advance debt relief for even more borrowers,” Education Secretary Miguel Cardona said in a news release. “Today, after considering more than 26,000 public comments on how to tailor this relief, we are releasing this additional information about this effort. We’re committed to standing up for borrowers and making sure that student debt does not stop anyone from climbing the economic ladder and pursuing the American dream.”

A committee of 14 people representing student loan borrowers, higher education institutions and other stakeholder groups is scheduled to meet Oct. 10 and 11—the first of three two-day virtual sessions scheduled over the next three months. The specific parameters of what kind of debt relief the Biden administration will pursue or what plan will even emerge from the negotiations is unclear at this point, though an issue paper released Friday offers some clues.
The department wants the committee to give feedback on several questions including how to assist borrowers who would be eligible for forgiveness under a repayment plan but didn’t apply for those programs, or those who attended programs that didn’t provide a financial value sufficient to repay their loans, according to the issue paper, which officials said was intended to the guide the discussion at the first meeting.
“We want to explore what potential types of hardship borrowers face and how the department might deliver relief to those borrowers under the Higher Education Act,” Under Secretary James Kvaal said on the call with reporters.

The department also wants the committee to consider how to help borrowers who have balances higher than what they originally borrowed because of unpaid interest that accrued or who aren’t eligible for repayment benefits that were created after they took out the loans. Negotiators on the committee and members of the public also can suggest different categories to explore, Kvaal said.
The Higher Education Act of 1965 allows the department to “compromise, waive or release” its claims against borrowers. The department is considering revisions to those regulations as well as adding rules regarding the circumstances under which the department could waive all or part of federal student loan debts.
Siddique said the issue paper does not suggest any intent by the administration to narrow eligibility for loan relief. More than 40 million people would’ve seen relief under the administration’s first plan.
“I think that the goal of these papers is to essentially take into account what the contours of the Higher Education Act are [and] articulate a set of challenges that different borrowers face based on what the department is looking at,” Siddique said.

 

Federal Student Loan Borrowers Reveal Grim Expectations for Payment Resumption​

As the end of the pause on student loan payments nears, 62% of federal borrowers say they expect to miss at least one payment, with plans to cut back on spending and put less money in savings to make ends meet

KEY TAKEAWAYS​

  • Roughly 7 in 10 federal borrowers in households that earn at least $100,000 annually said they expect to miss at least one payment and may default.
  • 3 in 4 borrowers said they would need to reduce spending on nonessentials like entertainment in order to afford making their student loan payments again, while 2 in 3 said they would work extra hours to earn more or find additional work.
  • More than 4 in 5 borrowers expect some or all of their loans will be erased if the Supreme Court upholds the Biden administration's forgiveness plan.


 

Federal Student Loan Borrowers Reveal Grim Expectations for Payment Resumption​

As the end of the pause on student loan payments nears, 62% of federal borrowers say they expect to miss at least one payment, with plans to cut back on spending and put less money in savings to make ends meet

KEY TAKEAWAYS​

  • Roughly 7 in 10 federal borrowers in households that earn at least $100,000 annually said they expect to miss at least one payment and may default.
  • 3 in 4 borrowers said they would need to reduce spending on nonessentials like entertainment in order to afford making their student loan payments again, while 2 in 3 said they would work extra hours to earn more or find additional work.
  • More than 4 in 5 borrowers expect some or all of their loans will be erased if the Supreme Court upholds the Biden administration's forgiveness plan.


What were folks doing this past 3 years?

How can you be making six figures, have less than 20k in student loans, and expect to miss a payment? Do folks just spend every penny they get?:smh::smh:
 
What were folks doing this past 3 years?

How can you be making six figures, have less than 20k in student loans, and expect to miss a payment? Do folks just spend every penny they get?:smh::smh:

Price of the brick called cost-of-living went up.............

Even for high earners, student loan repayment is crushing​

People aren’t only cutting streaming subscriptions and cooking at home — they’re dipping into 401(k)s and postponing retirement.

This October, 28 million Americans are facing a monthly expense they haven’t seen in over three years: student loan payments. Three months after the Supreme Court struck down President Joe Biden’s student debt forgiveness plan, interest is again piling up and borrowers are combing over household budgets already stretched to the limit.

It’s a financial shake-up coming at a time when the cost of everything is unbearably bloated, whether it’s food, gas, rent, or mortgage rates. The pace of inflation has calmed, down to the middling threes from near 9 percent highs last year, but the price of goods isn’t decreasing. In a survey of more than 1,000 people by insurance firm MassMutual, about three-quarters of those with college debt said they’re planning on cutting spending now that student loan payments have resumed — with around half saying they’re slashing on essentials.

The return of student loan payments will hit low-income households most. About 50 percent of households making less than $50,000 a year believe they won’t be able to make all their loan payments, according to a June 2023 Morgan Stanley report. But college debt is a burden even for those with higher incomes. One recent Morning Consult report found that a majority of households making over $100,000 expected to miss at least one payment.

Bryan Drozdowski, 39, is intent on making breakfast and lunch at home every day from now on, bringing packed leftovers with him on in-office days. When payments were paused, he and his wife would buy lunch someplace close to work, or indulge in a Starbucks coffee. He’s already cut out less-used streaming services. Such spending is hard to justify now that he’s once again chipping away at the school loans he’s been saddled with since 2011, when he graduated from an MBA program with about $32,000 of debt. He made steady payments until the pandemic pause.
“My balance went up during those nine years,” he says. Despite making payments for nearly a decade, he currently owes even more than he started with: $38,000, thanks to a 6.8 percent interest rate.

Drozdowski, who works in finance, earns roughly $140,000 a year. He recognizes that a monthly bill of around $325 isn’t as bad as what other borrowers face. Yet the student loan restart came right as his Seattle rent rose by 10 percent, to $3,400 :eek2::eek2:, and his car insurance by 27 percent. “When you add things up, it’s like $1,000 more a month that I wasn’t paying previously,” he says.

Drozdowski doesn’t qualify for the Biden administration’s income-based SAVE plan, which reduces payments most for low earners. It uses the federal poverty threshold (which is just $14,580) to determine borrowers’ reduced monthly payments — single households making $32,800 or less annually shouldn’t owe anything under SAVE. Borrowers like Drozdowski who are living in expensive cities with exorbitant rents, often having moved there for a well-paying job hard to find elsewhere, won’t see lower payments.

This past May, 32-year-old Veronica, who asked her surname not be published to maintain her privacy, graduated with an MBA and almost $100,000 in student loans. She originally thought her monthly payments would be around $115 per month due to the SAVE plan. Overjoyed, she entered the final stages of buying a home in Massachusetts, approved for the mortgage in part because of the assumption that her student loan obligations would hover around $100 each month.

Then the rest of her graduate school loans — there were seven in total — came into repayment status. About half of student debt is from graduate school, and grad school loans tend to have higher interest rates than undergrad ones, topping 7 percent this year; grad students can also take out more money than undergrads. The true number for Veronica’s loan payments was closer to $760 every month. She had to halt the purchase of the house, though she did eventually find a less expensive one she could qualify for a mortgage on. Her and her husband’s monthly household expenses are about $2,600, not including her current rent of $2,665 plus $250 per month for a parking spot. The mortgage on the new house would be $5,000 per month.

“It’s just embarrassing — I have a degree, I have a job,” Veronica says. “I make $95,000 a year, and look at me on the struggle bus. It’s ridiculous.” She and her husband have tamped down on “fun” money that went to hobbies, and her husband is dog walking to earn extra money.
Rose, who requested to use a pseudonym to protect her financial privacy, graduated with a master’s degree in 2019 with about $94,000 in student loans. She chose to go to grad school because she was living in a costly city — New York — making $35,000, with dim prospects of earning more. Attending school was expensive, even before future loan payments were figured in. Despite juggling a full-time job while pursuing her degree, she incurred about $20,000 worth of credit card debt for school and living expenses. When she couldn’t keep up with her minimum payments, her credit score tanked. “I’m really happy that I was able to go to grad school, because I don’t think I could get my job right now,” she says of her project manager role in the tech industry. At the same time, a part of her regrets it. “It kind of felt like a damned if you do, damned if you don’t situation.”

Now that student loan payments are back, she’s looking at more than $1,000 going toward both her credit card and student debt each month. Over the pandemic, she was laid off twice. Today she works three jobs — one full-time job in tech, plus two freelance roles for a total of about $120,000 a year — and still feels strapped, limiting her grocery budget to $50 per week. She’s considered taking on more freelance jobs. “But there are only 24 hours in a day,” she says.

Rose worries she might have to scale back how much she pays toward her credit card debt each month, which could lower her credit score even more. But she doesn’t want the balance on her hefty student loans to grow either.

One 65-year-old parent who took out Plus loans for two children told Vox they are delaying retirement and cutting back on food costs to make debt payments. Others are canceling vacations and gym memberships to prepare for their higher expenses.

The shadow student loan debt is casting over millions of people isn’t just about the difficulty of rearranging expenses to balance a budget; with a repayment period of 20-plus years, student loans can feel like a yoke borrowers will never be free from. Research confirms that college debt weighs heavily on the psyche. “We think about debt as being simply money owed,” says Adam Greenberg, a behavioral economist at Bocconi University in Milan. “But people don’t mentally label each type of debt the same way.”

Greenberg authored a 2020 study that found that student loan debt is tied to lower life satisfaction in ways that other kinds of debt aren’t. Student loans are perceived straightforwardly as debt, while a mortgage is thought of as an investment. Greenberg posits student loans are perceived differently than credit card debt because credit cards don’t utilize structured payment plans like student loans — they have minimum payments, but allow consumers to keep a revolving balance indefinitely. Adding to this calculus is the fact that student loans can’t be discharged in bankruptcy like most other debts can.

A degree isn’t necessarily an asset people can enjoy immediately, unlike a mortgaged house — people with college and advanced degrees still struggle to find jobs that cover rent, other living expenses, and loan payments, at which point the value of having taken on school debt becomes frustratingly muddied.

On its own, paying off student loans again wouldn’t be such a big deal for Drozdowski. But compounding living costs are raising stress — a straw threatening to break the camel’s back.

For Veronica, student loan debt is delaying having a child. She also feels that her debt is foreclosing the possibility of retirement in the long term, and of taking care of her parents in the near term. “We don’t think we’re gonna retire,” she says. “I withdrew $40,000 from my 401(k) to be able to buy a house.”

Rose, who is 28 now, plans on leaving New York if she’s still living paycheck to paycheck by age 30. She doesn’t expect to pay off her student loans for decades, and her current timeline relies on the presumption that she won’t have other major expenses come up — and that she won’t have children. “It just feels like this is the way I’m gonna live forever,” she says.

There’s a sense of frustration at what could have been — a “glimpse of freedom,” as Drozdowski puts it — when payments were frozen and debt cancellation seemed close at hand. The benefits of the payment pause were obvious to borrowers and to the broader economic outlook, while the downsides of this long freeze aren’t so clear. Schools weren’t affected, since they already got their tuition. The federal government didn’t collapse because it stopped collecting student debt payments, and the pause had a minimal impact on inflation.

“I have family members and colleagues who are like, ‘Oh, you didn’t have to pay for so long, boohoo,’” Drozdowski says. “Yeah, but we really built that into our life for the last three and a half years.”

 
What were folks doing this past 3 years?

How can you be making six figures, have less than 20k in student loans, and expect to miss a payment? Do folks just spend every penny they get?:smh::smh:
What were folks doing this past 3 years?

How can you be making six figures, have less than 20k in student loans, and expect to miss a payment? Do folks just spend every penny they get?:smh::smh:

Federal Student Loan Borrowers Reveal Grim Expectations for Payment Resumption​

As the end of the pause on student loan payments nears, 62% of federal borrowers say they expect to miss at least one payment, with plans to cut back on spending and put less money in savings to make ends meet

KEY TAKEAWAYS​

  • Roughly 7 in 10 federal borrowers in households that earn at least $100,000 annually said they expect to miss at least one payment and may default.
  • 3 in 4 borrowers said they would need to reduce spending on nonessentials like entertainment in order to afford making their student loan payments again, while 2 in 3 said they would work extra hours to earn more or find additional work.
  • More than 4 in 5 borrowers expect some or all of their loans will be erased if the Supreme Court upholds the Biden administration's forgiveness plan.



It's funny I did a focus group centered around this a little bit yesterday. Most of the participants indicated how they would need to modify their budgets because payments will be resuming.

I will add and I am not sure if they mentioned this in the article, but if you do miss a payment, it will not get reported to the credit bureau atleast not until like September or October of 2024.

I think the government and the student loan companies should do a better job explaining though how some of the new rules will affect alot of people... I think people are afraid because they are thinking they will have to go back to making the same payment amounts before Covid, but with the new plans and how they will calculate your AIG and etc., most people payments will be reduce drastically....
 
Student loan repayments waste no time weighing on shoppers' wallets

Brian Sozzi
Fri, October 6, 2023 at 6:00 AM EDT
If the Grinch is going to steal Christmas from retailers, pin the blame on the restart of student loan payments.

Already, the resumption of payments on Oct. 1 appears to be weighing heavily on the minds of consumers with outstanding student debt.

About 40% of people with student loans expect to cut spending, according to a new survey of 1,500 consumers conducted by Wedbush analyst Tom Nikic. Of this cohort, Wedbush's work showed average student loan debt balances ranging from $0 to $50,000.


Read more: Worried about when student loan repayments resume? These programs could help

The Grinch balloon passes by windows of a building on Central Park West during Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade in New York Thursday, Nov. 23, 2017. (AP Photo/Craig Ruttle)
The Grinch balloon passes by windows of a building on Central Park West during Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade in New York Thursday, Nov. 23, 2017. (Craig Ruttle/AP Photo)
The categories that were most often cited as areas for spending pullbacks were restaurants, apparel, and electronics.

Some of the most at-risk retailers from any spending slowdown are discretionary names such as Williams-Sonoma (WSM), Wayfair (W), and Best Buy (BBY) Nikic said.

The restart of payments — after a crushing blow in June to President Biden's plan to forgive up to $20,000 in debt for millions of borrowers — has put the crippling amount of student debt on the books of many households back into the spotlight.

The total amount of student debt in the US tallies a bloated $1.8 trillion, per the most recent data from the Federal Reserve. Student loan debt levels have tripled since 2008.

An estimated 43 million people in the US have some amount of outstanding student loan debt, so a wide swath of the population could be poised to rein in consumption into year-end.

Data from the Federal Reserve estimates that the typical student loan payment ranges from $200 to $299 a month. US consumers could now end up making an incremental $120 billion of student loan payments annually, estimates Nikic.

Nikic's research computes that if consumers need to spend an incremental $120 billion annually on student loan payments, it could wipe off 2.5% of the total $5 trillion in discretionary spending done annually.

That's brutal news for retailers still contending with high merchandise inflation, rampant theft, and a shift to demand for services.

"With consumers now needing to divert some of their monthly income towards student loan payments, there is risk that this could 'crowd out' other spending items," Nikic explained. "Furthermore, this comes at a time when U.S. consumers are increasingly feeling pressures from a variety of sources, including waning pandemic savings, rising gas prices, record-high credit card debt, and a continued normalization of spending on services vs. goods. Thus, these factors could combine to weigh on a variety of companies, including retailers of discretionary goods."

In fact, discretionary retailers may be seeing the first round of effects that Nikic discussed.

Macy's () said its second quarter credit card sales 36% from the prior year to $150 million. Department store rival Nordstrom () voiced that it's seeing a similar trend.

Interest on student loans began accruing once again on Sept. 1 after several COVID-related pauses.

The rise in credit card payment delinquencies and weak credit sales on both Macy's and Nordstrom last week.

In turn, investors continue to approach shares of discretionary retailers cautiously into the start of the holiday shopping season.

The Consumer Discretionary Select Sector SPDR Fund () has shed 7% in the past three months, worse than the 4.5% decline in the S&P 500. Shares of Macy's and Nordstrom are down 32% and 30%, respectively, over the same stretch. Kohl's () is off by 23% while Target () has declined by 22%.

Another new survey out this week from Morgan Stanley's Jeffrey Adelson found that only 24% of student borrowers can make their full monthly payment without reducing spending. That is down from 29% just three months ago.

About 50% of student debt borrowers intend to begin paying their loans this month, meaning consumers' cash flows are getting "tighter," Adelson pointed out.

"Consumers are having an incrementally harder time making ends meet over the past several months," Adelson said.

is Yahoo Finance's Executive Editor. Follow Sozzi on Twitter and on . Tips on deals, mergers, activist situations, or anything else? Email brian.sozzi@yahoofinance.com.

 
Student loan repayments waste no time weighing on shoppers' wallets

Brian Sozzi
Fri, October 6, 2023 at 6:00 AM EDT
If the Grinch is going to steal Christmas from retailers, pin the blame on the restart of student loan payments.

Already, the resumption of payments on Oct. 1 appears to be weighing heavily on the minds of consumers with outstanding student debt.

About 40% of people with student loans expect to cut spending, according to a new survey of 1,500 consumers conducted by Wedbush analyst Tom Nikic. Of this cohort, Wedbush's work showed average student loan debt balances ranging from $0 to $50,000.


Read more: Worried about when student loan repayments resume? These programs could help

The Grinch balloon passes by windows of a building on Central Park West during Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade in New York Thursday, Nov. 23, 2017. (AP Photo/Craig Ruttle)
The Grinch balloon passes by windows of a building on Central Park West during Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade in New York Thursday, Nov. 23, 2017. (Craig Ruttle/AP Photo)
The categories that were most often cited as areas for spending pullbacks were restaurants, apparel, and electronics.

Some of the most at-risk retailers from any spending slowdown are discretionary names such as Williams-Sonoma (WSM), Wayfair (W), and Best Buy (BBY) Nikic said.

The restart of payments — after a crushing blow in June to President Biden's plan to forgive up to $20,000 in debt for millions of borrowers — has put the crippling amount of student debt on the books of many households back into the spotlight.

The total amount of student debt in the US tallies a bloated $1.8 trillion, per the most recent data from the Federal Reserve. Student loan debt levels have tripled since 2008.

An estimated 43 million people in the US have some amount of outstanding student loan debt, so a wide swath of the population could be poised to rein in consumption into year-end.

Data from the Federal Reserve estimates that the typical student loan payment ranges from $200 to $299 a month. US consumers could now end up making an incremental $120 billion of student loan payments annually, estimates Nikic.

Nikic's research computes that if consumers need to spend an incremental $120 billion annually on student loan payments, it could wipe off 2.5% of the total $5 trillion in discretionary spending done annually.

That's brutal news for retailers still contending with high merchandise inflation, rampant theft, and a shift to demand for services.

"With consumers now needing to divert some of their monthly income towards student loan payments, there is risk that this could 'crowd out' other spending items," Nikic explained. "Furthermore, this comes at a time when U.S. consumers are increasingly feeling pressures from a variety of sources, including waning pandemic savings, rising gas prices, record-high credit card debt, and a continued normalization of spending on services vs. goods. Thus, these factors could combine to weigh on a variety of companies, including retailers of discretionary goods."

In fact, discretionary retailers may be seeing the first round of effects that Nikic discussed.

Macy's () said its second quarter credit card sales 36% from the prior year to $150 million. Department store rival Nordstrom () voiced that it's seeing a similar trend.

Interest on student loans began accruing once again on Sept. 1 after several COVID-related pauses.

The rise in credit card payment delinquencies and weak credit sales on both Macy's and Nordstrom last week.

In turn, investors continue to approach shares of discretionary retailers cautiously into the start of the holiday shopping season.

The Consumer Discretionary Select Sector SPDR Fund () has shed 7% in the past three months, worse than the 4.5% decline in the S&P 500. Shares of Macy's and Nordstrom are down 32% and 30%, respectively, over the same stretch. Kohl's () is off by 23% while Target () has declined by 22%.

Another new survey out this week from Morgan Stanley's Jeffrey Adelson found that only 24% of student borrowers can make their full monthly payment without reducing spending. That is down from 29% just three months ago.

About 50% of student debt borrowers intend to begin paying their loans this month, meaning consumers' cash flows are getting "tighter," Adelson pointed out.

"Consumers are having an incrementally harder time making ends meet over the past several months," Adelson said.

is Yahoo Finance's Executive Editor. Follow Sozzi on Twitter and on . Tips on deals, mergers, activist situations, or anything else? Email brian.sozzi@yahoofinance.com.


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Key takeaways;

  1. The repayment restart has been a full-blown goat rodeo especially in regards to IDR plans applicants and borrowers.
  2. The ED placed “affected borrowers” into an administrative forbearance while they get things sorted out.
  3. Those placed into forbearance will be credited with qualifying payments for months spent in this administrative forbearance.
  4. You’re eligible for a refund of any recent payments made in a moment of panic.
  5. There may or not be 420K affected borrowers placed into an administrative forbearance.
  6. 4M borrowers have been successfully enrolled into SAVE to-date. An unknown number of applications are pending.
  7. The ED has already and continues to crap the bed with poor planning around and borrower communication about repayment restart procedures.
 


Key takeaways;

  1. The repayment restart has been a full-blown goat rodeo especially in regards to IDR plans applicants and borrowers.
  2. The ED placed “affected borrowers” into an administrative forbearance while they get things sorted out.
  3. Those placed into forbearance will be credited with qualifying payments for months spent in this administrative forbearance.
  4. You’re eligible for a refund of any recent payments made in a moment of panic.
  5. There may or not be 420K affected borrowers placed into an administrative forbearance.
  6. 4M borrowers have been successfully enrolled into SAVE to-date. An unknown number of applications are pending.
  7. The ED has already and continues to crap the bed with poor planning around and borrower communication about repayment restart procedures.

Thanks. Just sent this to my homegirl.. she has graduate loans, signed up for SAVE, but somehow her payments didn't really go down much.
Even after talking it out with her servicer Nelnet a few weeks back. I told her those ppl dunno wtf they doing :smh:
 
Thanks. Just sent this to my homegirl.. she has graduate loans, signed up for SAVE, but somehow her payments didn't really go down much.
Even after talking it out with her servicer Nelnet a few weeks back. I told her those ppl dunno wtf they doing :smh:

Yeah seems like she can request an administrative forbearance...
 
Interesting



Denied Student Loan Forgiveness? Borrowers Can Now ‘Buy Back’ Credit, Within Limits

Adam S. MinskyOct 12, 2023,
Biden student loan forgiveness
WASHINGTON, DC August 24, 2022: US President Joe [+]
The Washington Post via Getty Images
The Biden administration has launched a new initiative that will allow borrowers to “buy back” credit toward student loan forgiveness under a key federal program for public servants. The launch follows the implementation of new loan forgiveness regulations that went into effect this summer.

Here’s what borrowers need to know.

Buyback Option Under New Student Loan Forgiveness Rules

The initiative is part of the Public Service Loan Forgiveness program, which allows borrowers working in qualifying nonprofit or government employment to receive student loan forgiveness after 120 qualifying payments, the equivalent of 10 years.

Under PSLF rules, generally only time spent in repayment under either the 10-year Standard plan or an income-driven repayment plan can count toward student loan forgiveness. Time spent in other repayment plans may not count. And time spent in most kinds of deferment and forbearance would not count, either.

The Education Department enacted new regulations on July 1 that expand access to PSLF. The new rules relax some of the requirements defining a “qualifying payment” for PSLF, and allow certain additional periods of deferment and forbearance to count toward student loan forgiveness under limited circumstances.

The new regulations also provide for a “hold harmless” option. According to an Education Department fact sheet released last year in advance of the new rules, this would allow borrowers “to have other periods of deferment and forbearance potentially counted toward PSLF if they make payments equivalent to what they would have owed at the time.” But although the new regulations went into effect on July 1, until now, the department had not released any details outlining how this feature would work.

Biden Administration Releases Guidance On New Student Loan Forgiveness Buyback Option

This week, the Biden administration released detailed new guidance on the hold harmless feature, which the Education Department is calling a “buyback” option.

“Due to recent changes in PSLF regulation, you can now buy back certain months in your payment history to make them qualifying payments for PSLF,” says the department. “Specifically, you can buy back months that don’t count as qualifying payments because you were in an ineligible deferment or forbearance status.”

According to the guidance, to be eligible for the buyback option borrowers must still have an outstanding Direct federal student loan balance, and they must already have 120 months of qualifying PSLF employment such that buying back months of non-qualifying periods of deferment and forbearance would result in receiving student loan forgiveness.

The cost of the buyback to the borrower will be based on the borrower’s income and family size for the period in question using an IDR formula. “You must make an extra payment of at least as much as what you would have made under an income-driven repayment (IDR) plan during the months you’re trying to buy back,” says the department. “The amount required will be based on your income and family size at the time of the deferment or forbearance, not your current income and family size.” That means borrowers will have to supply income documentation from that time period.

There are several restrictions on the feature, as well. Borrowers who have less than 120 certified months of qualifying PSLF employment aren’t eligible. Any periods prior to Direct loan consolidation can’t be bought back. In-school periods, post-graduation grace periods, and periods of default and bankruptcy all are excluded from the buyback option. Only other kinds of deferment and forbearance are potentially eligible.

How To Apply For Student Loan Forgiveness Buyback

Notably, the buyback feature is less generous than another Biden administration initiative called the IDR Account Adjustment. Under this temporary program, borrowers can receive student loan forgiveness credit toward PSLF for many prior periods of deferment and forbearance, including periods prior to consolidation and other past periods that may not be eligible for buyback under the new rules.

“Before submitting a PSLF buyback request, we strongly encourage you to wait until accounts are updated through the payment count adjustment,” cautions the Education Department in its new guidance. “If you’ve already submitted a PSLF form and have approved qualifying employment, you may see updates beginning this fall. This includes PSLF credit for months of eligible deferment or forbearance at no added cost to you.”

The Education Department is already implementing relief under the IDR Account Adjustment, and hundreds of thousands of borrowers have already received student loan forgiveness through PSLF as a result of this temporary initiative. The IDR Account Adjustment’s implementation should conclude sometime next year.

After that, borrowers can submit a buyback request through the PSLF Reconsideration portal. “Include the following in your PSLF reconsideration request for buyback,” instructs the department: “I have at least 120 months of approved qualifying employment, and I am seeking PSLF or TEPSLF discharge through PSLF buyback. Please assess my eligibility for PSLF buyback.”

Further Student Loan Forgiveness Reading

Student Loan Forgiveness And Repayment Plans At Major Risk As Problems Worsen

Biden’s New Student Loan Forgiveness Plan Starts To Take Shape

‘A Big Deal’: Student Loan Forgiveness Approved For 3.6 Million Borrowers

Student Loan Forgiveness Proceeds And Payments ‘Cut In Half,’ But System Buckles

Follow me on Twitter or LinkedIn. Check out my website.
Adam S. Minsky is an advocate, innovator, and entrepreneur who established a

... https://www.forbes.com/sites/adammi...uy-back-credit-within-limits/?sh=32bdab5e36b5
 

More Than 400,000 Student Loan Borrowers Had Wrong Monthly Payments​

The Education Department said miscalculations had caused many borrowers to see higher monthly payments than they actually owed.


People walk on a college campus in front of a large building with columns.

More than 28 million federal student loan borrowers returned to repayment this month after a pandemic-related relief program put their monthly bills on pause for nearly four years.Credit...David Degner for The New York Times

People walk on a college campus in front of a large building with columns.

Tara Siegel Bernard
By Tara Siegel Bernard
Published Oct. 16, 2023Updated Oct. 17, 2023, 10:52 a.m. ET
Now that the federal student loan machinery has been set back into motion, hundreds of thousands of borrowers are discovering that their monthly payments had been miscalculated, often for higher amounts than they actually owed.
The mistakes have come to light as more than 28 million federal student loan borrowers returned to repayment this month after a pandemic-related relief program put their monthly bills on pause for nearly four years.
The miscalculations have affected borrowers being transferred into the Biden administration’s new income-driven repayment plan, known as SAVE, which bases borrowers’ monthly payment amount on their income and family size. The program promises to cut many borrowers’ payments by more than half compared with the program it replaced, called REPAYE, but at least one loan servicer hit a snag as it moved borrowers from the old program to the new one, which led to the wrong payment amounts.
The Missouri Higher Education Loan Authority, called MOHELA, used the 2022 poverty guidelines instead of 2023 to calculate the payments, which caused roughly 1 percent, or 280,000 borrowers, to be given “modestly higher” payment amounts than they should have had under the new SAVE plan. Borrowers were notified about their correct payment amount, according to the Education Department.
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The Education Department also said it noticed discrepancies in some payment amounts as part of its standard review process last month, which led it to ask the loan servicers to audit their files regarding calculations made to family size, income or marital status. These mistakes caused some borrowers’ payments to be too high and a “very small number” of borrowers to be charged too little.

Understand Student Debt Relief Under President Biden​

Card 1 of 6
Key initiatives. Since he took office, President Biden has had a broad initiative aimed at alleviating the pressure on federal student loan borrowers. Here is where the plans stand:
Student loan forgiveness. In 2022, the president announced that the federal government would cancel up to $20,000 worth of federal student loans per person. The Education Department subsequently began accepting applications, but court battles later halted the government from discharging any debt. On June 30, the Supreme Court rejected Biden’s plan, saying that the president had overstepped his authority.
Pauses on repayments. A payment pause on federal loans has been extended eight times since March 2020 as part of a pandemic relief measure. But as part of an agreement between Biden and Speaker Kevin McCarthy to raise the debt ceiling, the pause was lifted and repayments started up again in October.
Income-driven repayment. On August 22, the Biden administration opened for enrollment its new income-driven repayment plan, known as SAVE, in which borrowers’ monthly payments are tied to their income and family size. It will enable millions of borrowers to significantly cut their monthly federal payments, eventually by as much as half.
Targeted relief. The Biden administration has wiped out debts for eligible public service workers, permanently disabled borrowers, defrauded students and people whose schools abruptly closed while they were enrolled.
Fixing mistakes. The administration has also announced that more than 800,000 borrowers with federal loans owned directly by the Education Department and who enrolled in income-driven repayment plans would have $39 billion in debt eliminated under an effort to remedy years of mistakes by the loan servicers that collect payments on the government’s behalf.
  • After it noticed the issues, the Education Department said, it immediately directed loan servicers to notify affected borrowers and put them into administrative forbearance until they were able to calculate the correct payment amounts.

“We take our oversight role very seriously, and when mistakes happen, we work swiftly to resolve them and make sure there is as little impact as possible on borrowers,” said a spokeswoman for the Education Department, who estimated that the two problems affected less than 1.5 percent of borrowers starting repayment, or roughly 420,000 people.
Borrowers who paid too much will be offered a refund.
People who want to ensure the accuracy of their payment amounts can use the loan simulator tool at StudentAid.gov, which should generate a close approximation of what they owe, but any discrepancies may take some time and perseverance to get fixed.
“Unfortunately, the bigger issue is that it’s hard to get those problems resolved right now if you can’t get someone on the phone,” said Persis Yu, deputy executive director at the Student Borrower Protection Center, referring to the notoriously long wait times for loan servicer representatives.


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Bobby Matson, the chief executive of Payitoff, a debt management software company, said the company started to notice the errors when his firm’s repayment calculations were confirmed as accurate yet they didn’t match the payment amounts that many loan servicers were posting to borrower accounts.

“We’re seeing mistakes being made by the servicers because they’ve been grossly underfunded by Congress and left under-resourced for this influx of borrowers,” Mr. Matson said, adding that he has seen mistakes made across several loan servicers.
Congress kept funding flat for the Office of Federal Student Aid, just as many initiatives, including the big payment restart and the new SAVE program, were beginning. At the same time, the Biden administration has been offering targeted debt relief to student borrowers through a variety of other programs.
Scott Buchanan, the executive director of the Student Loan Servicing Alliance, an industry group, said that most of the current issues had been addressed — and that the loan servicers had been upgrading their computer systems so they could handle more types of requests online.
“When you make big changes in the midst of resumption — including transferring people into a new repayment program that is far more complicated than the last one — there will be challenges and pockets of borrowers where we have to do manual work,” Mr. Buchanan said.
 
Clarence Thomas ruled against student debt relief. Now a Senate panel alleges his healthcare exec pal forgave his $267,230 loan.

Thomas' friend, healthcare exec Anthony Welters, loaned him over $260,000 that Thomas used to purchase a luxury RV.

Sonam Sheth
Oct 26, 2023


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Web_448x485_Anthony-Welters.jpg

Anthony Welters, Executive Chairman of the BlackIvy Group, LLC and Senior Adviser to the Office of the CEO of UnitedHealth Group

clarence-thomas-rv.jpg


90


rv.jpg

 
Thanks. Just sent this to my homegirl.. she has graduate loans, signed up for SAVE, but somehow her payments didn't really go down much.
Even after talking it out with her servicer Nelnet a few weeks back. I told her those ppl dunno wtf they doing :smh:







 

Biden administration revamps its student debt forgiveness plan​

The Education Department released a new proposal that would provide loan forgiveness to four categories of borrowers.


Oct. 31, 2023, 9:30 AM EDT
By Summer Concepcion
The Biden administration is proposing a new plan to forgive student debt, months after the Supreme Court struck down President Joe Biden’s sweeping pandemic-era debt relief plan in June.

The Education Department on Monday released a student debt relief proposal that would target four categories of borrowers: those with federal student loan balances that exceed the original borrowed amount; those with loans that entered into repayment 25 years ago or more; those with loans for career training programs that led to “unreasonable debt loads or provided insufficient earnings”; and those who are eligible for forgiveness under other repayment plans but have not applied for it.

 

Biden administration revamps its student debt forgiveness plan​

The Education Department released a new proposal that would provide loan forgiveness to four categories of borrowers.


Oct. 31, 2023, 9:30 AM EDT
By Summer Concepcion
The Biden administration is proposing a new plan to forgive student debt, months after the Supreme Court struck down President Joe Biden’s sweeping pandemic-era debt relief plan in June.

The Education Department on Monday released a student debt relief proposal that would target four categories of borrowers: those with federal student loan balances that exceed the original borrowed amount; those with loans that entered into repayment 25 years ago or more; those with loans for career training programs that led to “unreasonable debt loads or provided insufficient earnings”; and those who are eligible for forgiveness under other repayment plans but have not applied for it.

I missed this, but this is good news. Biden working hard for us.
 


The U.S. Department of Education said on Thursday it plans to hold accountable student loan services that fall short in their duties, as repayments resumed last month after a three-year halt due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

The move comes after the administration of President Joe Biden withheld interest rates payments for nearly a million student borrowers after a company that services their loans failed to send out billing statements on time. About 2.5 million people were affected, the Education Department said last month.

The Missouri Higher Education Loan Authority was late in issuing the statements, a failure that led borrowers to miss their payments. The government held back $7.2 million from the loan service as a result of the misstep.
 


The U.S. Department of Education said on Thursday it plans to hold accountable student loan services that fall short in their duties, as repayments resumed last month after a three-year halt due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

The move comes after the administration of President Joe Biden withheld interest rates payments for nearly a million student borrowers after a company that services their loans failed to send out billing statements on time. About 2.5 million people were affected, the Education Department said last month.

The Missouri Higher Education Loan Authority was late in issuing the statements, a failure that led borrowers to miss their payments. The government held back $7.2 million from the loan service as a result of the misstep.

I read on redditt some people are getting their academic forbearance extended because of this BS

Mohela account alert = payment pause extension until 2024 (I think).​

renderTimingPixel.png

Not 100% confident but here is what I’ve “learned” over the past couple days. Please correct me if you know better. This is not advice.
  1. If you received an account alert saying your payment isn’t due until 12/28/23, it is real.
  2. You will be placed on forbearance backdated to 9/1/23 and extending to 12/28/23. You can verify under My Account—>Loan Details
  3. Any interest accrued since the payment start will be erased.
  4. If you have a payment due, you can ignore it if you have forbearance listed.
  5. This forbearance counts for 3 free months of PSLF.
  6. Unclear what will happen to payments already made. They told me that the amount will be considered “prepaid” for future months. Others say Mohela offered them a refund in 60 days.
  7. Reps were told about this issue later in the day yesterday or this morning.
Edit: If you know specifically why, or how many people got this forbearance, I’d be interested to know. I think it’s the result of Ed’s sanctions for late payment statements (and whatever else). A rep told me it was for everyone and will happen in waves as the new platform is constructed.
 
Not sure how accurate this is, but I would recommend you guys to look at this video...This would be very interesting if true....

@Madrox



If this is true and I can see this happening man this would be a fucking game changer.

Change the income limit to where people making less than 80,000 would pay zero dollars......


@850credit, @DC_Dude

You guys remember this video?

It almost seems like this is actually coming to fruition :please:
 
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