- On average, we estimate that current borrowers with outstanding loans would see a $3,694 increase in their lifetime loan payments on a net present value basis, compared to current law under the Biden administration’s SAVE plan.1
- We estimate that borrowers in the first quintile of the income distribution, those with graduate degrees, those older than 35 years old, Black borrowers, and those with higher debt-to-income ratios would see bigger increases in lifetime loan payments relative to current law.
Category | Average Policy Savings (Includes All Borrowers) |
---|---|
Overall | |
-$3,694 | |
Income Quintile | |
Q1 | -$4,610 |
Q2 | -$3,975 |
Q3 | -$4,385 |
Q4 | -$2,163 |
Q5 | -$3,379 |
Educational Attainment | |
Associate's degree or Some College | -$1,624 |
Bachelor's degree | -$3,738 |
Graduate degree | -$7,194 |
Age Group | |
18-24 | -$1,138 |
25-35 | -$3,004 |
36-45 | -$5,057 |
46+ | -$4,910 |
Gender | |
Male | -$3,416 |
Female | -$3,880 |
Race | |
White | -$3,129 |
Black | -$5,069 |
Hispanic | -$3,530 |
Other | -$4,705 |
Debt-to-Income Ratio | |
<20% | -$323 |
20-40% | -$1,230 |
40-60% | -$5,789 |
60-80% | -$7,290 |
80-100% | -$8,936 |
100%+ | -$17,354 |
Source: PWBM calculations from 2019 Survey of Consumer Finances (SCF) data merged with PWBM Microsim
Note: Our distributional analysis of future borrower cohorts—drawing in part on confidential data from the National Center for Education Statistics (NCES)—will be released soon.
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Our calculations are based on Survey of Consumer Finances (SCF) data that include information on student loan debt outstanding balances, household income, demographics, and repayment plan choice. We reweighted the 2019 SCF data to target the most recent Department of Education (ED)’s publicly available data as of September 2024 on outstanding student loan amounts by debt size and age. As our analysis for current borrowers relies on SCF data, it is susceptible to concerns related to small sample sizes for certain subgroups. ↩