Former US Secretary of Education William Bennett has slammed President Joe
Biden’s plan to address student loan debt, which was unveiled on Wednesday, as a “terrible” and “idiotic" idea.
Speaking to Fox News, he suggested that “the only reason we can think that a person would advance this would be for political purposes.”
Bennett also warned of “the inflationary effect” of the student loan forgiveness scheme, stressing that “almost everyone, including former Obama administration officials, indicate that this will add a lot of fuel to the fire in terms of inflation.”
“So that money that was just forgiven will go into the economy and heat things up — and prices will go up. Prices will go up for everyone,” he asserted.
The former education secretary also claimed that those who will be hurt the most by this will be “the people who have the least — and who will not have the benefits of the student forgiveness plan.”
Bennett went on to say that “as soon as you forgive these loans for higher ed, the colleges and universities will raise their tuition and fees. And they will.”
The remarks follow Biden announcing on Wednesday that the government will forgive $10,000 in student loan debt per borrower and up to $20,000 for those that received Pell Grants. Under the blueprint, the loan forgiveness is limited to those making less than $125,000 a year for individuals or $250,000 a year for households.
According to the White House, this action could wipe out debt entirely for nearly 20 million of the 43 million Americans who currently hold student loan debt.
Critics were quick to suggest that the plan will further add to the already record-high levels of inflation in the US.
Late last month, Forbes referred to reports claiming that the US Department of Education had significantly underestimated the cost of the federal student loan program, arguing that the department will most likely lose $197 billion on student loans issued over the past 25 years, something that apparently prompts a question mark on how the Biden administration will tackle fiscal issues pertaining to its current student loan forgiveness scheme.