It’s Time for Young People to Demand a Solution to the Student Debt Crisis – The Nation Fund for Independent Journalism

  • About Us
  • What We Do
    • Internship
    • Studentnation
    • 2025 Puffin Student Writing Fellows
    • 2025 Student Journalism Conference
    • Nation Classroom
    • Fellowship for the Future of Journalism
  • Memorial Fund
    • The Victor Navasky Memorial Fund
    • Celebrating Victor Event
    • Donate to the Memorial Fund
    • When Giving Feels Personal
  • News
  • Apply
  • Join us
  • Donate
Skip to content

NEWS

News > It’s Time for Young People to Demand a Solution to the Student Debt Crisis

February 22, 2022

It’s Time for Young People to Demand a Solution to the Student Debt Crisis

By Lisa Herforth-Hebbert

Student body leaders representing over 1 million people recently urged President Biden to cancel student debt. Now is the moment to join them.

By Brendan Rooks and Orlando Cabalo

Student debt borrowers demand that President Biden cancel student loan debt during a demonstration outside the White House. (Paul Morigi / Getty Images)

A common phrase said to the millions of young people that seek higher education is that “college is a ladder of upward mobility.” Unfortunately, from trade school to college, this ladder is sinking in a swamp of $1.7 trillion of student loan debt.

But college students are pushing back against the growing weight of this crisis. Students at the University of California, Riverside (UCR) recently joined the Student Debt Crisis Center (SDCC) in a burgeoning “Free the Degree” college outreach coalition. The student government unanimously passed legislation calling on President Biden to cancel all federal student loan debt. The Associated Students of UC Riverside (ASUCR), which represents over 24,000 students, joined the Free the Degree coalition because of the economic benefits and the moral imperative of debt cancellation.

From the 2008 Great Recession to the Covid pandemic, college students’ political perspectives have been shaped by major economic and health crises. In both of these major events, the wealthy and well-connected got bailouts while working people were left out to dry. Throughout the pandemic, students have seen the federal government rush to pump over $1 trillion into Wall Street, while President Biden has still not fulfilled his promise to broadly cancel student debt. Many current students, seeing the looming crisis, have thrown in their lot with supporting federal loan forgiveness.

Read full article.

Category: Featured StudentNation

Featured

Why Texas Universities’ Drag Bans Backfired
Journalism Schools Are Facing Dual Pressures Under Trump
40 Years After the MOVE Bombing, the Scars Remain

More Articles

520 8th Avenue, Fl 21
New York, NY 10018

  • Contact Us
  • Apply
  • Support Us
  • Privacy Policy

All content © 2025. All Rights Reserved.

The Nation Fund for Independent Journalism is a 501(c)(3) organization, and donations are tax deductible to the fullest extent provided by law.

Follow Us

The Nation Fund for Independent Journalism is a 501(c)(3) organization, and donations are tax deductible to the fullest extent provided by law.

All content © 2025. All Rights Reserved.