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Biden’s student loan forgiveness most needed by Black Americans


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In August, when President Joe Biden rolled out his historic plan to cancel up to $20,000 in student loan debt for tens of millions of Americans, one of the policy’s stated goals was “to help narrow the racial wealth gap.”

Shortly after the president’s announcement, critics of student loan forgiveness brought a series of legal challenges against the plan, saying it was an abuse of executive authority, and soon the Biden administration had to pause its program.

The Supreme Court has agreed to hear two of those cases at the end of February. Legal experts say the policy faces a narrow path to survival with the court, given its conservative majority.

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If the relief plan falls through, the consequences for Black Americans will be severe, advocates say.

“Not only would this be a disastrous blow to Black Americans, but to our economy as a whole — the racial wealth gap will widen, and the vicious cycle of economic inequality will continue,” said Wisdom Cole, the national director of the youth and college division at the NAACP.

Here are three reasons why the student loan crisis is worse for Black Americans, and why they’d especially feel the loss of loan forgiveness, experts say.

1. Student debt ‘exacerbates racial inequality’

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And since student debt is often taken on relatively early in a person’s life, it can then make it harder to hit other milestones down the line that help build wealth, such as buying a house and investing, experts say.

“Student loan debt is both a product of the racial wealth gap and a tool that exacerbates racial inequality,” said Jaylon Herbin, director of federal campaigns at the Center for Responsible Lending.

In 2018, about 40% of Black college graduates said their student debt delayed their ability to buy a home, compared with 34% of their white peers, Kantrowitz found.

2. For-profit colleges target Black students

“Black students are more likely to enroll in for-profit academic institutions with lower degree completion rates,” Herbin said. “Therefore, they often are forced to repay debt for higher education that did not increase their job prospects.”

In the 12 years after entering college, nearly half of for-profit students defaulted on their student loans, according to the Brookings Institution.

3. Black borrowers struggle more with repayment

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