[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 200 (Thursday, December 7, 2017)]
[House]
[Pages H9747-H9748]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
TO ATTACK STUDENT LOAN DEBT, EMPOWER STUDENTS
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under the Speaker's announced policy of
January 3, 2017, the gentleman from Virginia (Mr. Garrett) is
recognized for 60 minutes as the designee of the majority leader.
Mr. GARRETT. Mr. Speaker, I appreciate the opportunity to address
this Chamber and, indeed, America about the challenges that we face at
this time in our country. There are many. Some exist within this
Nation, some exist overseas, and some have many answers being batted
around in Washington; whereas, others have nearly none.
One of those challenges that has hamstrung our youngest generation is
the massive, dark cloud of student loan debt. When our colleague,
Senator Sanders, from the other side of the aisle addressed student
loan debt during the Presidential campaign last year, he was correct in
identifying a problem. The way that he chose to address it I would
disagree with, as he suggested that we should provide for people
something from the government. I would suggest that the people should
provide for themselves.
There are two schools of thought, one that the people rely on the
government, and one that the government should rely on the people.
So how do you address this massive black cloud of student loan debt
that is handicapping our youngest and most creative generation? That is
something that we have started to do today with the filing of H.R.
4584, the Student Security Act.
I speak to you tonight about a brighter future, a future where
individuals are empowered to make decisions for themselves and where
they can escape this looming cloud of debt so they might be free to do
things that we have, heretofore, perhaps taken for granted in this
country, like buy a new car, like start a family, or, in the words of
former Presidential candidate Hillary Clinton, move out of mom and
dad's basement.
But the most important thing that they are not able to do because of
the black cloud of debt that faces them, Mr. Speaker, I would submit,
is harness the creativity and the energy that is embodied by their
ideas. This is a nation of ideas, and certainly when you
[[Page H9748]]
are encumbered with over $40,000 of loan debt per person on average,
you are not able to get that small business loan, and you are not able
to start that new business to put those ideas into action and create
jobs.
In fact, a recent poll last month indicated that the majority of
millennials would sacrifice their very franchise, that is the right to
vote, in exchange for relief from their student loan debt. All too
often, heretofore, the words ``student debt'' in the Halls of
Washington have scared up images of free college. Anyone knows--even
Mr. Sanders knows--that nothing is free; someone pays. But that is no
excuse to ignore the problem. Why not allow individuals the option and
opportunity to pay their own debt?
Over 40 million Americans--myself included--are paying back $1.3
trillion in student debt, yet we have done nothing realistic to address
this problem.
How do you address new problems? You must address new problems with
new ideas. H.R. 4584, the Student Security Act, is just that.
I will stop as an aside to take a moment to thank a young man, Elliot
Harding, a recent student from Charlottesville, Virginia, who came to
me with this idea: What do we do as a nation if we lose the creativity
of an entire generation because of this burdensome debt? Because that
is what we are on the precipice of.
I contemplated it and decided that this isn't something I was able to
let happen on my watch. So as a result, I was all ears as he explained
the idea that became student security.
It is as follows: right now we know that the Social Security plan
that our seniors--indeed, my very mother--rely upon to get by on a day-
to-day basis is facing an imminent bankruptcy, that solvency is in
question, and that by 2034, according to most estimates, there will be
no solvency. That is a problem, too.
Many of you at home are wondering how I moved from student loan debt
to Social Security, and that is the beauty of this idea. To empower
individuals to make decisions for themselves and address these very
real challenges, the Student Security Act would allow a student to
write off $550 of student loan debt for every month that they were
willing to voluntarily forgo a Social Security benefit. The time value
of money, my friends. We have forced no one to do anything. We have in
no way, shape, or form changed one scintilla of the promise that is
Social Security that we have made for generations to our seniors. But
at the same time, we have provided an 11 percent increase in the
solvency of that program, extending the life of that promise without
raising taxes and without forcing a single soul to do a single thing
against their will.
That would translate into $6,600 per student, per year, that they
were willing to voluntarily forgo receipt of Social Security benefits.
The bill would cap at a maximum of $40,150 in debt relief. This would
correspond to a 6-year delay in receipt of Social Security benefits,
and, again, no one would be forced to do a thing, but students who
sought to remove from their lives the black cloud of student loan debt
would be empowered to, at their own discretion, make this decision for
themselves.
{time} 1730
As they say in the TV world: But wait; there is more.
We ran this program past the Congressional Budget Office and then
later past the Social Security Administration. What would the impact on
Social Security be when empowering people to make decisions for
themselves? And, by the way, how would we defray the costs as to people
who are young now, who won't invest in Social Security until later,
versus the fact they are students now?
The numbers are not good; they are great. We would allow cosigners on
loans this option as well, to avail their children or grandchildren of
these benefits should they choose to defer receipt of Social Security
benefits, again to the amount of $40,150. That would begin immediately.
That would also save, according to the Social Security
Administration, $700 billion, while also addressing the very real needs
of American students currently hamstrung by a broken college finance
system.
So what do we do with the Student Security Act?
We are delighted to welcome Congressman Ferguson, Congressman Brat,
Congressman Rokita, and Congressman Messer. We invite our colleagues
from both sides of the aisle to look at this outside-the-box, dynamic
new way of addressing the solvency of Social Security and the
insolvency of our youngest, most creative generation.
The data indicates that we would extend the viability of the Social
Security program by 11 percent of what is needed to make it wholly
solvent in perpetuity. That would be the equivalent of a 0.3 percent
increase in the payroll tax, but without a tax increase and without
taking anything from anyone without their voluntary entry into the
program.
It would lift the black cloud of student loan debt to the tune of
over $40,000 per person in a world where 90 percent of debtors have
less than $40,000 in debt, and it would return to the coffers of this
indebted Nation, by the Social Security Administration's estimates,
$700,000,000,000--seven-tenths of $1 trillion.
So I stand here today and ask you to ask yourselves:
Do you trust people to make good decisions for other people?
Do you believe that people should rely on government or that
government should rely on people?
Do you believe that this country can harness the ideas and the vision
and the energy of what is inherently the most creative generation if we
are able to free these young people from burdensome debt that stops
them from engaging in key life events like buying a home and buying a
car and getting married and starting a business?
Do you believe that we need to think outside the box to ensure that
we keep the promise that is Social Security, which has been made in
this country for generations?
If you, like me, believe this and are a Member, I invite you to join
as a patron of H.R. 4584, regardless of your party affiliation or
ideology. If you, like me, as a citizen, believe this is a good idea, I
invite you to speak to your Representatives.
Mr. Speaker, this is an opportunity not only to change how we do
business, but to empower people to empower themselves to create greater
opportunity and prosperity in this country by harnessing the energy and
ideas of our youngest and largest living generation and to keep the
promise that we have made for generation after generation and to people
like my mother that Social Security will remain reliable and solvent.
Again, I invite you to join on this legislation or contact your
Representative and encourage them to join. H.R. 4584, the Student
Security Act, is a new way of addressing an old problem that relies on
the oldest solution, and that is individuals empowered to work for
themselves.
Mr. Speaker, I yield back the balance of my time.
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