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Current programs exist right now which forgive debt even if you make payments of $0 over 20 years. These programs (IBR and PAYE) were put in place because they sound good, appeal to a specific voter demo, and have deferred costs which have yet to forgive any debt.
In order for large amounts of debt held by a small minority of debt holders to be forgiven, all we have to do is wait 5 or so years and those programs will already be required to forgive the debt. If nothing is done, large amounts of debt held by a small minority will already be forgiven. The small minority of student debt holders have already mostly accomplished what you express skepticism of their ability to do.
Additionally, the creditors, which I believe to be a far stronger and more powerful interest and lobby group, also want the debt to be forgiven because it being forgiven will mean the US government printing money and handing it to them for bad debts which will not be paid off otherwise.
The bail-out is already agreed to, all we're doing is waiting around until the programs already written and millions of people who already rely on them reach the terminus point of that agreement. And the longer it isn't addressed, the harder and harder it will be for any change of course.
For these reasons, the bail outs and debt forgiveness is coming.
Interesting, thanks.
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