ThinkCraft with Ali Shana
On July 9th, the “One Big Beautiful Bill Act” was signed into law. The presidential administration has praised it as a budget breakthrough that simplifies federal aid. But in practice, this bill fundamentally redraws who can afford to attend graduate school—and who can’t. In this solo episode of ThinkCraft, I break down what the bill actually does, who it affects, and why the name may be more distraction than direction. Here’s a summary of what I discussed: What’s changing? The law: * Eliminates existing income-driven repayment plans like SAVE, PAYE, and REPAYE for new borrowers. * Replaces them with a single “RAA” (Repayment Assistance Agreement) plan—longer in duration (30 years), but less forgiving, especially for low-income borrowers. * Caps federal borrowing for graduate and professional students, pushing them toward private loans. * Restricts deferment and forbearance options and restores aggressive debt collection powers. * Ends economic hardship and unemployment deferment for loans disbursed after July 2027. Who loses? * Graduate & professional students: Borrowing caps ($100k total for master’s, $200k for professional degrees) will force many into the private lending market. * Low-income borrowers: The RAP calculates payments off your full adjusted gross income with no poverty safeguard. Under SAVE, the first $35,000 of income wasn’t counted—now, every dollar is. * Future borrowers: They’ll face fewer protections, higher monthly payments, and limited flexibility. Who wins? * High-income professionals: Those who can afford the fixed Standard Plan get to avoid income scaling altogether. * Private lenders: With federal caps, their customer base grows. * Federal budget hawks: The bill promises to save $349 billion over time, per the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget. What’s at stake? This isn’t just a fiscal maneuver. It’s a cultural shift. The law frames itself as simplifying aid, but it narrows the path to upward mobility. It restricts options for families—especially Black and Latino households—who’ve long used Parent PLUS and Grad PLUS loans to fill financial gaps and secure higher education for their children. The Big Beautiful Bill is budget reconciliation on paper—but in spirit, it’s a retraction of access. Listen to the full episode on Youtube (embedded above) or as a a podcast here, on Spotify, or Apple Podcasts. Also, please consider connecting with me on LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/ali-shana/]. Later this week, I’ll be interviewing Robin Gates [https://www.msoe.edu/about-msoe/news/details/robin-gates/] - an MSOE Nursing Professor and Director of Nursing at the St. Ann Center for Intergenerational Care. Similar to the first episode with Irma Castaneda [https://youtu.be/MqhEHz7w8Ec?si=HO35683oKC1BLq2i], I am hoping to learn more about the educational pathway that lead to her remarkable contributions in healthcare and caretaking education. In particular, I look forward to discussing her multidisciplinary approach to leadership, education, and how programs/policy frameworks might help reduce nursing burnout. Get full access to ThinkCraft at alireporting.substack.com/subscribe [https://alireporting.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]
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