From the Boston Globe: We can solve the racial wealth gap

By: Kimberly Atkins-Stohr for The Boston Globe

Kimberly Atkins-Stohr highlights the role predatory debt plays in widening the racial wealth gap in this story for the Boston Globe:

“I was inspired to write the series “We Can Solve the Racial Wealth Gap” — in honor of Stewart’s words, ‘Where is the money’ — based on my experience of coming out of graduate school with six-figure student loan debt. I remember talking to some of my classmates around graduation about what felt like an insurmountable financial hurdle, hoping to engage in a little group venting session.

But I couldn’t. None of my White friends in that conversation had student loan debt. Their parents paid their tuition.

That was the first time I really understood what the racial wealth gap was. I felt it. I worked hard, stayed in school, did what I was told to do to be successful. Yet my professional adult life began with me about $200,000 behind the starting line as compared with my peers.

Over the years, I watched them buy new cars, homes and vacation homes, and travel to exotic locations. Meanwhile, I bought decades-old used cars, rented apartments, and learned to travel on a shoestring. Despite holding similar professional titles, my net worth was a drop in the bucket of theirs. My hard work, and the hard work of my parents — who sent me to a private high school to boost my chances of having a bright future and helped me pay some of my grad school debt — was not enough. As I write this, I still have a five-figure student loan balance, although the light is beginning to appear at the long tunnel’s end.

I’m very lucky now to live well, within my means, and I have never known poverty. But I still have a fraction of the accumulated wealth of my White peers.” 

Read the full article HERE

White House details plans to extend student loan pause or finalize plan to cancel student debt by Aug. 31

White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki weighs in on the student debt crisis.

Last week, White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki gave statements as a guest on the podcast “Pod Save America” regarding the Biden Administration’s stance on student loan forgiveness. 

According to Psaki, there will be either another pause on student loan payments — following the White House’s most recent announcement that the pause on student loans had been extended to Aug. 31 — or a final decision will be made about student debt cancellation. President Biden previously expressed that he is in favor of a $10,000 student debt cancellation. Psaki made sure to reiterate “the President’s preference” of getting Congressional approval for a $10,000 student debt cancellation plan.

Though President Biden steered clear of any comments regarding student loans during his State of the Union Address last month, the White House has since been very vocal about their path towards student loan forgiveness.

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer also remarked that he and President Biden have had frequent and promising talks about student debt relief, last week, during a virtual Q&A hosted by the Student Debt Crisis Center.

"We're working on it,"  stated Schumer. "We're making progress, folks. We are making progress. The White House seems more open to it than ever before."