Former U.S. official on student loans: Borrowers need clarity before payment pause ends

The writer is former Chair of the FDIC and former Assistant Secretary of the U.S. Treasury for Financial Institutions.

Two years ago this month, former President Donald Trump announced that he was suspending federal student loan payments for 60 days as one of many economic relief programs launched in response to the COVID 19 pandemic. He later extended this “payment pause” until January 2021, which was extended again by President Biden to January 2022, and then again through May 1 of this year.

In announcing the extension to May 1, the president and his administration strongly communicated that payment obligations would resume and that borrowers needed to prepare. Then last Friday, the president’s chief of staff, Ron Klain, suggested the pause might again be extended, pending a decision on whether some portion of student debt should be cancelled altogether.

Klain is right that the president needs to decide about student debt cancellation before he decides on when to resume student loan repayments but wrong to keep this cloud of uncertainty over the heads of 40+ million student borrowers. They need to know whether and when their loan obligations will resume. With every delay, it becomes harder for them to prepare.

A different environment from March 2020

While the original case for the payment pause was compelling given the economic devastation caused by the pandemic, the situation is much different today.

Unemployment is low, jobs are plentiful, and the economy, if anything, is overheated from too much stimulus. There is no longer a need to boost consumer demand by providing extra cash to student borrowers. Moreover, as any private lender will tell you, the longer borrowers go without making their loan payments, the more difficulty they will have in resuming them. They become accustomed to managing their household budgets with the extra cash. Recommencing payments will require preparation time and planning. It will be no easy task.

Nor will it be easy for the federal government to convince some 40 million borrowers to start making payments again. The Department of Education’s new head of its Federal Student Aid office, Richard Cordray, has been busy preparing, launching a series of new educational and budget tools to help borrowers through the reinstatement process, and revamping student loan servicing, which has been plagued by inefficiency and dysfunction in the past. But his task will be virtually impossible if borrowers think cancellation of some or all student debt is in the offing.

Why resume loan payments when the government may eventually cancel your student loan?