But you could say the same thing about people with high credit card debt - “it was so easy to fill out the application and no one explained interest.” However, I think the viewpoint that somehow the colleges are to blame for loan debt is taking hold. People prefer to see themselves as victims than as ignorant and foolish.
The difference with credit cards is they are subject to bankruptcy, therefore credit risk is considered when deciding if credit is issued to an individual. So not just anyone can get a card and many people are limited to tiny limits due to said credit risk.
However with student loans there is no bankruptcy or credit risk. So the art major can get a massive loan to attend their private liberal arts school just as easily as the computer science student attending MIT. Obviously one has a way better chance of paying off a loan, but with bankruptcy insulation it doesn't matter.
So the real villain is the government, as usual. Colleges though are a close second because they took advantage of a broken system to greatly enrich themselves.
While I don't consider most students a victim; there are definitely some exceptions. For a long time, every piece of media and the entire primary and secondary education experience virtually demands kids attend college or be declared a loser . Many of those kids had no business going to college, but noone cared. Pretty tough to overcome 12 years of propaganda. The system definitely failed them.
The loan forgiveness is $300 Billion more in stimulus fuel being poured on the inflation fire. It's going to make chairman Powell's job to engineer a soft landing harder.
Meh. I think it's bad policy and a bad decision. It definitely does nothing to address skyrocketing costs, it penalizes responsible behavior, and as the other poster mentioned it creates a reward for irresponsible behavior. That's a bad combo.
However....none of these payments were being made the last two years with no real inflationary impact. Plus I'd love to see their internal projections as to how much money they thought these debts would actually recover. It couldn't be over 10 cents on the dollar.
So ultimately imo this was money they were never going to see anyway; even after the pause lifted