President Joe Biden recently indicated that he would seriously consider student loan forgiveness. But according to former White House economic adviser Stephen Moore, this gesture is not only bad politics but “worse economics” and would make the record-high inflation even worse.
Moore is a co-founder of the Committee to Unleash Prosperity and a distinguished visiting fellow at the Heritage Foundation.
“And by the way, if they were to do this plan, would anybody ever in the rest of history pay their student loans when the government’s just going to forgive you for them? So we’re going to have problems in the short term and long term if we do this,” said Moore.
On April 28, Biden said he was considering “some debt reduction.”
“I am not considering $50,000 debt reduction,” Biden told reporters at a press conference. “But I’m in the process of taking a hard look at whether or not there are going to—there will be additional debt forgiveness, and I’ll have an answer on that in the next couple of weeks.”
Moore said the debt and the government overspending had already caused economic problems in the first place.
“We’ve been spending way more money, trillions of dollars more money than we’re taking in. That floods the economy with cheap dollars,” said Moore. “The definition of inflation is too many dollars in the economy chasing too few goods. That’s exactly what we have right now.”
“We got a really disappointing number for the first-quarter GDP, which was negative 1.4 percent. We should be growing at about 5 or 6 percent, given that COVID is basically over; we’ve got businesses reopened; people going back to jobs; restaurants, hotels open again,” said Moore.
“I think our economics is upside down right now in Washington.”
Other economists are also critical of student debt cancellation.
Moore said Biden’s gesture was to please voters for the coming midterm elections. However, Biden and the Democrats might get hurt by the high inflation.
“Voters love when politicians play Santa Claus. That’s why politicians love to play Santa Claus. But I'll tell you this, people are very angry about the inflation problem right now,” said Moore.
“I am old enough to remember 1980 when Ronald Reagan beat an incumbent Democratic president, Jimmy Carter, and the main reason that Reagan won that landslide election was people were so fed up with the high inflation.”