Are Biden's student debt moves enough?

President Joe Biden didn’t offer much new to student loan borrowers, experts said, after the Supreme Court last month ruled against student loan forgiveness.

Instead, the president provided a watered-down forbearance via the “on-ramp” program, more details on the previously announced updated income-driven repayment (IDR) plan — Saving on a Valuable Education (SAVE)—and a promise to again try for debt forgiveness.

On Friday, the administration said it would start discharging loans for borrowers who’ve been in repayment for 20-25 years under the previously announced one-time payment adjustment. Some 800,000 borrowers will have $39 billion in federal student loans discharged.

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Still, the announcements disappointed many borrower advocates who were worried about the lack of broad-based student debt cancellation, loan servicer abuses, and broken forgiveness programs like Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF).

"What he has proposed isn’t relief — it’s a protracted negotiated rule-making period… setting the policy up for a slow-death at a moment when debtors need the exact opposite," The Debt Collective, a borrower advocacy organization said in a press release.

Although Biden announced the programs on the day of the Supreme Court decision, questions remained about implementation and how the process would impact borrowers.

Here’s what advocates are saying about the on-ramp program, SAVE income-driven repayment (IDR) plan, the promise to try loan forgiveness using the Higher Education Act, and the status of the one-time payment adjustment.

On-ramp program

To help borrowers adjust to their monthly payments that restart in September, the president announced the on-ramp repayment program, which will last for 12 months.

"The on-ramp is like a forbearance in many ways," Mark Kantrowitz, author and student loan expert, told Yahoo Finance. "It will not necessarily fix the problems experienced by borrowers, so much as delaying them."

If borrowers can afford to repay their student loans, some advocates recommend they should not use the on-ramp program— and thus avoid interest accrual.

"Borrowers should be aware that interest will be charged during the on-ramp period, so if they don't make payments or enroll in the new SAVE program they will see their balance grow," Abby Shafroth, co-director of advocacy at the National Consumer Law Center, told Yahoo Finance.

During the on-ramp period, borrowers who miss payments won't be reported to credit bureaus, won't be considered in default, and won't be referred to collection agencies for those payments.