Universities, colleges also need to be on the hook for student loan payment: Arkansas AG
Arkansas Attorney General Leslie Rutledge says she plans to take action against Biden’s student loan handout on ‘Mornings with Maria.’
When I learned of President Joe Biden’s latest student loan forgiveness plan, seven words, all beginning with the letter "I," came to mind: I thought the idea was illegal, inflationary, immoral, inequitable, irresponsible, irrational and idiotic.
- Illegal: The current law governing federal student loans dates back to the Obama era, P.L.111-152. In it, the Congress and president agreed on funding for the student loan program. Nothing in that law allows for the president on his own authority to dramatically change its terms. In fact, several years ago a U.S. Department of Education legal counsel memo found that it would be unconstitutional for a president to unilaterally change the terms of the law.
- Inflationary: We are in times of high inflation. Forgiving student loans increases incentives for colleges to raise tuition and fees more aggressively. Students will be emboldened to borrow more, thinking “I will not ever have to pay the loans back.” Empirical evidence by the New York Federal Reserve and others supports the Bennett Hypothesis (named after former Education secretary Bill Bennett): that most new federal student loan money ends up being absorbed by higher tuition fees; universities and their staffs benefit much more than students. Even staunch liberal Democratic economists like former Treasury secretary Larry Summers and Council of Economic Advisers head Jason Furman have opposed loan forgiveness because of the impact on prices.
THE FED IS AIMING TO ‘MEANINGFULLY DECELERATE’ INFLATION BY TIGHTENING POLICY, KANSAS CITY FED PRESIDENT SAYS
- Immoral: It is wrong to tell some borrowers that they need not meet their loan obligations — letting some favored persons ignore legal commitments, but not others.
WASHINGTON, DC – APRIL 27: Activists hold signs as they attend a Student Loan Forgiveness rally on Pennsylvania Avenue and 17th street near the White House on April 27, 2022, in Washington, DC. Student loan activists including college students held t (Photo by Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images / Getty Images) GET FOX BUSINESS ON THE GO BY CLICKING HERE GET FOX BUSINESS ON THE GO BY CLICKING HERE If this is so irrational and stupid, why is the Biden administration doing it? In reality, universities have become wards of the state and reliable and dependable political allies of big government. That may explain the administration’s actions: They think they owe it to their friends who contribute to their campaigns, provide them with ideas, and help staff their leadership. It will enable schools to raise fees even more and solidify the administration’s relationship with an important ally. Unfortunately, that does not make it good public policy. Source: Read Full Article