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by xelxebar
1429 days ago
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Individualistically, you're completely on point. However, what does your intuition say when you try to think systemically? There is some percentage of people who get screwed by loans due to unforseen circumstances and no fault of their own. Student loans are universal enough that the stats make this number of people non-insignificant. If it's nobody's fault, who should shoulder how much of the burden? So, say we make up a number and consider that we know around 10,000 people per year get student loans and eventually end up below the poverty line due to severely bad luck. The situation isn't their fault; it's also not the bank's fault. So what do you do as a policy maker? What if you knew that, by forgiving student loans, 8,000 of those individuals would bounce back and become productive members of society, while only 1,000 would otherwise? What are negative and positive impacts on forcing banks to shoulder the burden of these defaulting loans? What about forcing individuals to shoulder the burden? |
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