The Biden administration is looking to expand the very payment plan that became a prominent part of his beginning campaign.
Student loan borrowers now have the opportunity to go through a Beta application, where borrowers may be able to cut their loan payments in half.
The new Saving on A Valuable Education plan (SAVE), is an income drive plan with the potential to lower some student’s monthly payments to zero dollars.
The SAVE repayment plan or, IDF, accurately connects their ability to pay with the borrower’s monthly income. Student borrowers with a payment that is below the recurring interest in their account. Its forgiving criteria compared to other IDR programs make it “the most affordable plan yet.”
New IDR
Despite IDR’s portrayal as an affordable working-class repayment system its pitfalls almost negate the use of the plan. For instance, interest is the biggest pitfall for repayments. Interest can snowball on a borrower’s debt and eventually, the interest becomes more important than paying off the debt itself. Preventing automatic negative authorizations and preventing negative credit reports twelve months after repayments start are only some of the immediate benefits.
SAVE also benefits borrowers by introducing a new 5% discretionary income instead of the original 10%.
Those with relatively small loans can see an increase in the speed toward debt forgiveness. Those with $12,000 or less in their initial loan balance will receive debt forgiveness after 120 payments (an estimate of 10 years).
The revised app is set to launch sometime in August 2023 while interest for people’s debts will continue accruing, should the payments not be paid on time, in September and monthly payments will start again in October.
The Rebuff of the Sweeping Forgiveness Plan

Some citizens may be familiar with the Total Student Forgiveness plan. Biden prompted voters that he will ensure that all past students with an outstanding loan balance will have it wiped out and essentially debt free.
However, the Supreme Court swiftly shut down the proposal and their actions in the country’s eyes were considered an “absolute betrayal.”
At the denial of Biden’s plan, some in charge of the Federal Budget claimed the plan would negatively affect the rate at which people invest in education instead of raising it.
The President’s unilateral student debt cancellation plan was expensive, inflationary, poorly targeted, and would have done nothing to improve the affordability of higher education.
However, the statement came during a time when the U.S. afforded to spend billions in forgiveness for business-related loans during the pandemic, as Biden labels it.
They had no problem with billions in pandemic-related loans to businesses — including hundreds of thousands and in some cases millions of dollars for their own businesses. And those loans were forgiven– But when it came to providing relief to millions of hard-working Americans, they did everything in their power to stop it.
Written by Brielle R. Buford
Sources
CNBC: Supreme Court strikes down Biden’s student loan forgiveness plan
Forbes: Biden Administration Launches New SAVE Student Loan Repayment Plan
CBS News: Biden opened a new student debt repayment plan. Here’s how to enroll in SAVE.
Featured and Top Image Courtesy of Thomas Hawk‘s Flickr Page – Creative Commons License
Inset Image Courtesy of Gage Skidmore‘s Flickr Page – Creative Commons License


















