The Biden-Harris Administration’s Student Debt Relief Plan was recently introduced to students as a way to ease the transition off of pandemic-related support back to regular payments for working-class borrowers. 
“[Student loans] promote me to finish [school] faster, which I don’t really like. I prefer taking another year. But I don’t want to because I have to do loans,” BYU economics student Connor Packham said.
Some students said they believe with the forgiveness they could be debt-free and start investing in the future, while others do not believe it makes a big change. For Packham, the loan cancellation “doesn’t make a big difference.”
BYU English alumnus Maddy Schow said the loan forgiveness would make her more comfortable with other expenditures.
“With my loan being forgiven, I don’t have any debt besides my car and my house, which is great,” Schow said. “It would make me more comfortable with buying a house and starting a family knowing I wouldn’t have that extra payment every month.”
Other students said they disagree with Biden’s plan. “Biden’s plan is horribly unfair to everyone who didn’t attend college or who already paid for their education,” Computer engineering student Jake McCoy said. McCoy said he believes this measure is a politically-motivated act in anticipation of the upcoming midterm elections.

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