Lawrence H. Summers Profile picture
Dec 24, 2021 12 tweets 2 min read Read on X
Judged purely in terms of economic impacts, the Administration’s decision to extend student loan moratorium is highly problematic.
At a time when unemployment is unusually low and household balance sheets are very strong for all income quintiles, there is no special case for across the board relief now, unlike when it was put in place two years ago.
The Admin understood this when it made clear the last round of temporary debt relief would be the final one & not be extended. How much things have changed since the onset of Covid when it was completely explicit that student loan relief would sunset after the previous extension
The student debt relief is highly regressive as higher income families are more likely to borrow and to borrow more than lower income families. Adults with student  loans have much higher lifetime incomes than those without.
Often relief is indirectly benefitting high interest lenders, like credit card companies, who get paid back with funds saved on account of the moratorium on student debt payments.
Relief also promotes spending in the near term when the economy is clearly supply constrained thereby contrbuting to inflation pressures.
In general, relieving debts for those in distress promptly is good policy. Across the board relief of debts, where the vast majority can pay and are expected to pay, has the perverse effect of rewarding those most who borrow most.
My comments here focus on the economics of student debt relief. Any Administration has to recognize the need for compromise w important constituencies and political imperatives. To the extent these are factors, I can not judge the overall wisdom of the decisions made.
Most of the responses to my observations on student debt relief were ad hominem. Usually ad hominem arguments are made by those who lack substantive ones.
The main substantive issue involves progressivity. Here I think most all serious economists are in agreement that across the board debt reduction is regressive, nearly unanimous for just about the only time in this Chicago Booth poll. igmchicago.org/surveys/studen…
Key point. You need to look at payments not debt burdens since many are already enabled to service at low rates. 

The right place for reform is in student lending to prevent subsidy to institutions that rip students off and to replace loans with grants.
There are vastly better ways to transfer 6 billion dollars a month to help struggling families and to redress racism than this moratorium, where only 10 percent of the benefits go to the bottom 40 percent of families.

brookings.edu/blog/up-front/…

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More from @LHSummers

Mar 4
Harvard continues its failure to effectively address antisemitism.

Despite President Garber’s clear and strong personal moral commitment, he has lacked the will and/or leverage to effect the necessary large scale change, and the Corporation has been ineffectual.
Harvard’s CMES, where Harvard task force head Derek Penslar has remained a faculty affiliate, hosted a panel on “Israel’s war on Lebanon” that very likely was antisemitic, according to the IHRA definition the University recently adopted under legal duress.
As with antisemitic statements like Dean Marla Frederick’s address at the Divinity School Convocation--where she endorsed the term Nakba and drew qualified parallels between Israel’s founding and the Holocaust--University leadership has been silent.
Read 8 tweets
Feb 2
.@realDonaldTrump's tariffs are a bully strategy. Bullying doesn’t win over time on the playground or in the international arena. This self-inflicted supply shock is a strategic gift to Xi Jinping. 1/4
Just when inflation is sensitive, it will risk price increases for oil, food, and cars and may lead the @federalreserve needing to raise interest rates. 2/4
Jobs in the industrial heartland will be lost as American producers can’t compete due to higher input costs. Canada and Mexico will lose trust in us and retaliate as their economies suffer. Immigration and drug risks will increase. 3/4
Read 4 tweets
Feb 1
Aside from the general issues about Trump‘s tariff and his economic nationalism strategy, today’s actions against Canada and Mexico are inexplicable and dangerous. 1/8
First, the tariffs will raise prices on automobiles, gasoline, and all kinds of things that people buy. 2/8
Second, as the tariffs are passed on to consumers and then other firms raise prices to match their competitors higher prices, this will hurt American job creation by making American firms less competitive. Much of what we export, involves imported inputs. Cars move back-and-forth across the border between five and ten times during assembly. This makes the whole of North America much less competitive, relative to Europe and Japan. 3/8
Read 8 tweets
Apr 1, 2024
I was very disappointed that the Harvard Law Student Government endorsed divesting in Israel. This following on what the Harvard Graduate Student Union did some time ago illustrates that there is a pervasive prejudice problem on the Harvard campus.
I continue to believe that BDS advocacy, if heeded, would represent anti-semitism in effect, if not intent.
Despite the fact that actions like this damage Harvard’s reputation and reflect on all in the Harvard community, academic freedom is a paramount value. Students have every right to speak as they wish. There are no grounds for discipline. And certainly there should be plenty of room for debate over Israeli policy. I certainly have profound disagreements with PM Netanyahu and with Israeli actions in Gaza. But academic freedom does not include freedom from criticism or responsibility.
Read 7 tweets
Feb 27, 2024
In new NBER paper with @MA_Bolhuis, @juddcramer and Oskar Shulz, we argue that the unprecedented increase in borrowing costs is crucial to explaining the low consumer sentiment of the last two years. 1/N
nber.org/papers/w32163
With higher rates, mortgage payments, car payments, and other credit payments required to finance everyday purchases have risen as well. It is not surprising that this would affect how consumers feel about the economy. 2/N
Since Okun invented his misery index in the 1970s, economists have looked at unemployment and the inflation rate to gauge consumer sentiment. But now that unemployment is low and inflation has declined, consumer sentiment remains depressed. 3/N Image
Read 9 tweets
Oct 9, 2023
In nearly 50 years of @Harvard affiliation, I have never been as disillusioned and alienated as I am today.
The silence from Harvard’s leadership, so far, coupled with a vocal and widely reported student groups' statement blaming Israel solely, has allowed Harvard to appear at best neutral towards acts of terror against the Jewish state of Israel.
Unlike President Bacow’s strong statement of support for Ukraine after Putin’s invasion and the decision to fly the Ukraine flag over Harvard yard...rb.gy/zx7ff
Read 7 tweets

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