Student Loan Payments Resumption Won't Shake US Economy, New Fed Research Finds

Zinger Key Points
  • The resumed payments will lead to an estimated average monthly spending cut of $56 by millions of student borrowers.
  • The revival of student loan payments after a pandemic pause could lead to revised spending habits for nearly 44 million Americans.

The Federal Reserve Bank of New York has concluded that the resumption of federal student loan payments will have a minimal effect on the U.S. economy.

What Happened: The New York Federal Reserve has indicated that the return of federal student loan payments will not significantly impact the U.S. economy, as reported by The Wall Street Journal. The research suggests an estimated average monthly spending cut of $56 by millions of student borrowers resuming loan payments.

This translates to a reduction of approximately $1.6 billion in consumer spending every month across 28 million federal student loan borrowers.

“The findings suggest that the payment resumption will have a relatively small overall effect on consumption, on the order of a 0.1-percentage-point reduction in aggregate spending from August levels," said the New York Fed research team in a post on the bank's Liberty Street Economics blog.

See Also: GOP Congressman Slams Fellow Republicans Over Jim Jordan’s ‘Dumbest’ Support Strategy For Speaker Nominee

The federal student loan payments were put on hold during the Covid-19 pandemic in 2020. The 43-month pause in payments resulted in savings of over $260 billion in waived payments throughout the pandemic for borrowers. Federal student loan interest resumed in September, with payments starting again this month.

The researchers suggested that new regulations on federal income-driven repayment plans and accrued savings will help alleviate some of the burden in monthly payments.

Why It Matters: The resumption of federal student loan payments after a three-year pandemic-induced pause could result in new spending patterns and financial stress for nearly 44 million Americans. According to a survey by Jefferies, sectors such as apparel, accessories, restaurants, and footwear could face headwinds.

President Joe Biden in July announced the forgiveness of $130 million in student debt for 7,400 borrowers who attended the now-defunct CollegeAmerica. This debt relief measure followed allegations of the college misleading students about their career prospects and loans.

Read Next: Ex-Mi6 Agent Alleges His Friendship With Ivanka So Outraged Trump That He Took Revenge By Revealing Secre

Photo via Shutterstock


Engineered by Benzinga Neuro, Edited by Ramakrishnan M


The GPT-4-based Benzinga Neuro content generation system exploits the extensive Benzinga Ecosystem, including native data, APIs, and more to create comprehensive and timely stories for you. Learn more.


Market News and Data brought to you by Benzinga APIs
Comments
Loading...
Posted In:
Benzinga simplifies the market for smarter investing

Trade confidently with insights and alerts from analyst ratings, free reports and breaking news that affects the stocks you care about.

Join Now: Free!