cover image: How Do Income-Driven Repayment Plans Benefit Student Debt Borrowers?

20.500.12592/157vzhy

How Do Income-Driven Repayment Plans Benefit Student Debt Borrowers?

17 Oct 2024

The rapid rise in student loan balances has raised concerns among economists and policymakers. Using administrative credit bureau data, we find that nearly half of the increase in balances from 2010 to 2020 is due to deferred payments, largely driven by the expansion of income-driven repayment (IDR) plans, which link payments to income. These plans help borrowers by smoothing consumption, insuring against labor income risk, and reducing the present value of future payments. We build a life-cycle model to quantify the welfare gains from this payment deferment and the channels through which borrower welfare increases. New, more generous IDR rules increase this transfers from taxpayers to borrowers without yielding net welfare gains. By lowering the average marginal cost of undergraduate debt to less than 50 cents per dollar, these rules may also incentivize excessive borrowing. We demonstrate that an optimally calibrated IDR plan can achieve similar welfare gains for borrowers at a much lower cost to taxpayers, and without encouraging additional borrowing, primarily through maturity extension.
corporate finance asset pricing public economics financial economics economics of education labor studies health, education, and welfare national fiscal issues

Authors

Sylvain Catherine, Mehran Ebrahimian, Constantine Yannelis

Acknowledgements & Disclosure
We are grateful to numerous seminar participants and colleagues for helpful comments. TransUnion (the data provider) has the right to review the research before dissemination to ensure it accurately describes TransUnion data, does not disclose confidential information, and does not contain material it deems to be misleading or false regarding TransUnion, TransUnion’s partners, affiliates or customer base, or the consumer lending industry. The views expressed herein are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Bureau of Economic Research.
DOI
https://doi.org/10.3386/w33059
Pages
72
Published in
United States of America

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