Student Loans System Should Be Scrapped, Says Independent Editorial
Student Loans System Should Be Scrapped, Says Editorial

The Independent View: Abolish the Student Loans System Now

It is high time the student loans system was completely abolished. The financing scheme that enables university attendees to pay for their tuition should never have been introduced by Tony Blair's government, and it has only been made worse by successive administrations. Our students deserve to be cherished and supported, not exploited for financial gain.

Mis-Selling and Financial Burden on Graduates

No matter how intelligent a student might be, they cannot predict the distant future and are just as vulnerable as anyone else to what is broadly termed "mis-selling." For these precise reasons, there is absolutely no doubt that at least a certain cohort who graduated in the 2010s, after tuition fees were trebled, were indeed misled about the financial burden they would ultimately face.

They could not possibly have known that one day a government would make the terms under which they had taken on these notional but heavy-debt obligations much harsher. The indications they were given about repayments were plainly far too optimistic, and they were offered no choice in the matter—the government was the primary provider of tuition fee loans.

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As it happens, this cohort's graduation more or less coincided with the beginning of a long period of relative stagnation in earnings, yet more inflation in housing costs, and, more recently, an increase in general personal taxation. They are absolutely right to be angry about what has been done to them by successive governments of all political parties. But there are signs that they are now older, wiser, and angrier, and are starting to mobilise and make their case for some form of relief. They are entirely justified in doing so.

Unsustainable Debt and Usurious Interest Rates

There can be few individuals who are undaunted by the prospect of leaving college with debts running into the tens of thousands of pounds—sums compounded, literally, by a usurious interest rate, presently set at 3 per cent, plus the rise in the retail prices index. On the latest count, this makes the interest rate rather higher even than it would be based on the consumer prices index: roughly 7.2 per cent.

This is an absolute outrage. Setting aside promotions and bonuses, it outpaces increases in salaries, meaning that the debt in real terms, and in relation to income, becomes less and less manageable—implying an additional income tax rate of 9 per cent. For higher earners, taking account of other anomalies in the tax system, it can represent a marginal tax rate of 77 per cent, badly distorting incentives to work.

The freeze in the thresholds at which repayments kick in means that a graduate earning little more than the minimum wage will also be hit with a morale-destroying tax hike. The irony is that the repayments can be set so high that, in some cases, they can never be paid back and have to be written off, rendering the whole process utterly pointless. It is not even possible for a graduate to refinance their loan, as they might a mortgage or an overdraft. All in all, it is an absurd, unsustainable, and immoral state of affairs.

No Easy Answers and the Need for Reform

But neither is there an easy answer to this scandal, because it will be costly to correct. Even if, for example, the entire system were abolished for new graduates—whose parents and grandparents broadly escaped student debt—that would still leave a sort of accursed generation in their twenties and thirties who had been penalised by an accident of birthdate.

The system as a whole needs to be reformed, but in a manner that recognises that the universities themselves, which are coming under intense financial pressure, must be protected. There is good reason to make them more efficient, and to ensure that the pay, pensions, and conditions offered to staff and management in higher education are affordable and fair to taxpayers—and, indeed, graduates.

Britain has some of the finest universities in the world, but even the most modest of the former polytechnics can provide brilliant teaching and a life-enhancing experience—and boost the nation's human capital just as surely as a degree in literae humaniores from Oxford.

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Universities as Economic Assets

Every university in the country is a formidable export-earner and an asset to its community. Overseas students bring in significant income and spend money, and they should not be treated as immigrants in the normal sense of the word; restricting their visas is an extremely shortsighted move. In many a run-down town, the university is a rare source of well-paid jobs and local pride.

This is a long story of great betrayals. The student loans system should never have been introduced, given that graduates usually earn more, repaying society in enhanced output and adding to the economic growth that the whole country needs in order to sustain living standards and public services. Thus, graduates pay more tax in any case—and if they don't, questions need to be asked about the degrees being offered.

When the Blair administration brought in student loans to partially cover tuition fees, they were capped at £1,000 a year. Since then, students find themselves funding more and more of the higher-education budget, and it is beginning to blight both their lives and the sector, and thus the national economy.

Higher education is one of the few areas in which the UK enjoys an international comparative advantage. These institutions, and their students, should be cherished, not exploited.