Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You people don’t understand the CBO score. It doesn’t cost $400 Billion this year and won’t cost that much over 10 years either. It removes a $400 Billion accounting asset from the ledger, the amount of debt owed to the government that will be forgiven, but those loans would be repaid over a decade or more, not immediately, and a lot of them would be forgiven at least in part under current rules, but CBO has to assume that debts on the books will all be paid. The cost of loan forgiveness this year would be relatively minor to the economy and the federal budget because if the suspension is lifted everyone without total forgiveness will start paying again, even those with partial forgiveness.
Also CBO is only counting the revenue lost from loan payments, and not the economic activity of the borrowers spending that money elsewhere in the economy. When taxes are cut everyone accepts that the tax savings will be spent or invested elsewhere in the economy. The same is true for loan forgiveness. The money doesn’t disappear, it just doesn’t go to the government.
Yay, more inflation. Caused by people who have newfound money they “must” spend immediately a la stimulus checks and CTC.
Anonymous wrote:You people don’t understand the CBO score. It doesn’t cost $400 Billion this year and won’t cost that much over 10 years either. It removes a $400 Billion accounting asset from the ledger, the amount of debt owed to the government that will be forgiven, but those loans would be repaid over a decade or more, not immediately, and a lot of them would be forgiven at least in part under current rules, but CBO has to assume that debts on the books will all be paid. The cost of loan forgiveness this year would be relatively minor to the economy and the federal budget because if the suspension is lifted everyone without total forgiveness will start paying again, even those with partial forgiveness.
Also CBO is only counting the revenue lost from loan payments, and not the economic activity of the borrowers spending that money elsewhere in the economy. When taxes are cut everyone accepts that the tax savings will be spent or invested elsewhere in the economy. The same is true for loan forgiveness. The money doesn’t disappear, it just doesn’t go to the government.
Anonymous wrote:You people don’t understand the CBO score. It doesn’t cost $400 Billion this year and won’t cost that much over 10 years either. It removes a $400 Billion accounting asset from the ledger, the amount of debt owed to the government that will be forgiven, but those loans would be repaid over a decade or more, not immediately, and a lot of them would be forgiven at least in part under current rules, but CBO has to assume that debts on the books will all be paid. The cost of loan forgiveness this year would be relatively minor to the economy and the federal budget because if the suspension is lifted everyone without total forgiveness will start paying again, even those with partial forgiveness.
Also CBO is only counting the revenue lost from loan payments, and not the economic activity of the borrowers spending that money elsewhere in the economy. When taxes are cut everyone accepts that the tax savings will be spent or invested elsewhere in the economy. The same is true for loan forgiveness. The money doesn’t disappear, it just doesn’t go to the government.
Anonymous wrote:You people don’t understand the CBO score. It doesn’t cost $400 Billion this year and won’t cost that much over 10 years either. It removes a $400 Billion accounting asset from the ledger, the amount of debt owed to the government that will be forgiven, but those loans would be repaid over a decade or more, not immediately, and a lot of them would be forgiven at least in part under current rules, but CBO has to assume that debts on the books will all be paid. The cost of loan forgiveness this year would be relatively minor to the economy and the federal budget because if the suspension is lifted everyone without total forgiveness will start paying again, even those with partial forgiveness.
Also CBO is only counting the revenue lost from loan payments, and not the economic activity of the borrowers spending that money elsewhere in the economy. When taxes are cut everyone accepts that the tax savings will be spent or invested elsewhere in the economy. The same is true for loan forgiveness. The money doesn’t disappear, it just doesn’t go to the government.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:FYI: Biden’s student loan relief could cost $400 billion, Congressional Budget Office says Biden's student loan relief
Is that more or less than the PPP loan fraud?
Anonymous wrote:FYI: Biden’s student loan relief could cost $400 billion, Congressional Budget Office says Biden's student loan relief
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://thehill.com/changing-america/enrichment/education/3652377-white-house-releases-state-by-state-student-debt-forgiveness-estimates/amp/
90% of forgiveness is going to people earning less than $75k and the states with most forgiveness are California and The Great State of Texas. Seems like a very bipartisan spread, not at all a bunch of rich liberal artists.
So? You should be able to pay your bills making $75,000/year.
Anonymous wrote:https://thehill.com/changing-america/enrichment/education/3652377-white-house-releases-state-by-state-student-debt-forgiveness-estimates/amp/
90% of forgiveness is going to people earning less than $75k and the states with most forgiveness are California and The Great State of Texas. Seems like a very bipartisan spread, not at all a bunch of rich liberal artists.
Anonymous wrote:https://thehill.com/changing-america/enrichment/education/3652377-white-house-releases-state-by-state-student-debt-forgiveness-estimates/amp/
90% of forgiveness is going to people earning less than $75k and the states with most forgiveness are California and The Great State of Texas. Seems like a very bipartisan spread, not at all a bunch of rich liberal artists.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Since Biden just said the pandemic is over, does he still have the authority to do this?
https://www.cnn.com/2022/09/19/politics/biden-covid-pandemic-over-what-matters/index.html
He didn't have the authority to begin with.
This.
But it's a brilliant move to now make the judiciary and the GOP the "bad guys" for trying to revert the illegal move.
So what you are saying, is Biden really doesn’t care how it impacts the people who need loan forgiveness, so long as he can own the GOP? Compassionate.