New students starting at English universities this month might set off on intellectual or career paths, friendships or romantic attachments lasting a lifetime. Also lasting the best part of a lifetime could be their contribution to the funding of the English higher education system, as they get the first instalment of student loans with new, significantly altered terms and conditions.
The important impact for individuals from the changes made by the government for students starting this year 鈥 extending the repayment term from 30 to 40 years, lowering the repayment threshold and getting rid of real interest rates 鈥 has been widely discussed and widely described as 鈥渞egressive鈥 in lowering the costs higher-earning graduates would have faced under the old system while raising them for lower-middle and middle earners.
But less widely discussed is how the changes聽affect who pays what in funding England鈥檚 higher education system.
In announcing the changes in February 2022, the Department for Education said they would 鈥渓ead to significant savings鈥 鈥 for the government.
糖心Vlog
But the respected Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS)聽, because of the way student loan interest rates are now treated in government accounts, actually 鈥渋ncrease聽the total long-run government cost of financing higher education for the 2023 entry cohort from 拢1.6 billion if the system had remained the same鈥o 拢4.1 billion鈥.
That raises questions. Is the English higher education funding system now so complex that it鈥檚 near impossible to understand the fundamentally important issue of the balance between government and graduates in paying for it? What might that mean for the future of a system already viewed by many as unsustainable?
糖心Vlog
The wider context for this month鈥檚 loan changes is that higher education funding in England has largely聽been funded via student loans since 2012, when public grant funding was slashed and fees were trebled to 拢9,000.
The reason that move was attractive to the then Conservative-Liberal Democrat coalition government, set on austerity, was because student loan outlay was not included in public sector net borrowing, the government鈥檚 chosen measure of the budget deficit. The proportion of loan outlay that the government would never recoup only counted as spending when it was written off 30 years down the line.
This exposed the聽鈥渇iscal illusions鈥聽arising from the accounting rules on student loans, as the UK鈥檚 independent fiscal watchdog subsequently put it. Eventually, in 2018, the Office for National Statistics (ONS) announced changes meaning that the government鈥檚 estimate of the portion of loans never to be repaid would in future be classed as spending in the year of loan outlay 鈥 a change that added 拢12 billion to the deficit.
Another change made by the ONS was to reduce the interest receivable on student loans that聽can be treated by the government as income. Only the share of interest the government actually expects to be repaid is now counted.
As in 2012, the accounting rules on student loans seem to be a factor shaping policy: now loan write-offs聽affect the deficit more immediately, the government is reducing them; now interest rates no longer flatter the figures so much, the government is reducing them.
But despite the accounting rules evolving, judging the聽effect on public finances from the September changes and what they mean for the balance of funding between government and graduates remains highly complex, as the IFS spotlighted in its analysis.
Kate Ogden, a senior research economist at the IFS, said that because of the benefit for the upper half of earners from the end of real interest rates 鈥 a group who 鈥渨ould have paid back a lot of accrued interest鈥 under the old system 鈥 鈥渁verage repayments will likely go down under the new system鈥.
鈥淚f you account for it any sensible way, if government spends the same amount upfront but we expect graduates to repay less, then the cost of the system has gone up for government and down for graduates, on average,鈥 she said.
糖心Vlog
That the changes, overall, decrease the costs to government on the basis of the ONS鈥 accounting methodology is 鈥渂ecause the amount the government has to write off initially is lower if the interest rate is lower鈥, said Ms Ogden, 鈥渂ecause there will be less unpaid interest they have to write off.鈥
That spotlights 鈥渁 weird quirk鈥 in the ONS accounting methodology聽that 鈥渕eans they [the government] could reduce repayments for everyone, reduce the interest rate and still somehow reduce the initial amount of write-off鈥, she added.
But to add further complexity, others see the picture differently.
鈥淚t certainly seems to me when you look at it from [an individual] basis, rather than from the more complex accounting-type analysis, that the state will contribute less in the long run and the individual will contribute more in the long run,鈥 said consumer affairs expert Martin Lewis, founder of MoneySavingExpert and a presenter on ITV鈥檚 Good Morning Britain and This Morning, long an influential voice on student loans.
鈥淪o this is a swinging of the pendulum towards the individual.鈥
Regardless of how the September changes alter the balance, it鈥檚 certainly true to say that the coalition鈥檚 2012 changes set a path away from the cost-sharing system introduced by Labour in its system of 2006 鈥 tuition fees of 拢3,000 alongside publicly funded teaching grants 鈥 towards graduates bearing the bulk of the burden.
糖心Vlog
Changes to student finance increasing costs for graduates have, up to now, had very little impact on the number of students wanting to go to university. But will that continue to be the case?
鈥淐ertainly, the initial response, when I explain it,聽is: 鈥楿niversity isn鈥檛 worth it any more.鈥 Whenever you mention it on social media, there鈥檚 swathes of people saying that,鈥 Mr Lewis said of the September changes.
鈥淭hat isn鈥檛 my belief. But I do believe this change means that those who are going to university simply because they can鈥檛 think of anything else to do, or it鈥檚 not an active choice, should be looking at the finances.鈥
That perhaps offers another reason, alongside the political blocks on raising fees from 拢9,250 and the erosion of funding by high inflation, why it might be prudent for university leaders to advocate more even cost sharing between government and graduates, in the style of Lord Dearing鈥檚 1997 review of university funding, which paved the way to Labour鈥檚 2006 system. Lord Dearing recommended that government, business and graduates should share the costs of higher education 鈥 the business element of funding never materialised 鈥 reflecting that all those parties benefit from higher education.
Dame Sally Mapstone, the University of St Andrews principal and new Universities UK president, in her聽speech to the recent UUK conference, called for a 鈥減otential rebalancing of who pays for the costs of higher education鈥, recognising that its benefits聽were 鈥渘either wholly public nor private鈥.
Sir Chris Husbands, the Sheffield Hallam University vice-chancellor, told聽糖心Vlog, as he聽prepares to retire at the end of 2023: 鈥淚 do think we need to think hard about what the sector looks like over the next 25 years, which probably is a review.鈥
What the 2012 trebling of fees did was, 鈥渃rudely speaking鈥, to 鈥減rivatise the cost of higher education鈥, he added.
鈥淚f we look across the economy, we鈥檙e asking questions about whether water should be in private hands, about our railways, we鈥檙e asking about risk sharing,鈥 continued Sir Chris. 鈥淚t鈥檚 silly to say we鈥檙e going to take higher education out of that mix. We are going to have to look at cost sharing; we are going to have to look at a range of funding models.鈥
That argument on cost sharing is echoed by Nick Barr, professor of public economics at the London School of Economics, whose work influenced Labour鈥檚 2006 system.
The IFS analysis of the September changes shows how the new accounting rules on student loans remain 鈥渁 nonsense in terms of good economics鈥, Professor Barr said.
贬颈蝉听聽would be two-fold: one, 鈥渁ccount for student loans in a sensible way鈥oth for good economic governance and to prevent political distortions鈥 such as making loan changes 鈥渢o flatter public spending figures鈥; two, 鈥渉ave a transparent cost-sharing arrangement with an explicit tax-financed teaching grant plus student loans, hence a lower, less scary sticker price [in tuition fees] and visible subsidy鈥 from government.
Currently, government subsidy for university teaching, routed via loan write-offs, is perhaps invisible to most graduates, members of the public or even most politicians.
In terms of the right balance of cost sharing between government and graduates, Professor Barr suggested 鈥渆ither side of 50:50 with a margin鈥etermined politically鈥, adding: 鈥淚f you get a more visible subsidy, that makes it politically easier to have a reasonable balance and then to maintain that balance, adjusting sensibly in either direction as the economy or events unfold.鈥
It鈥檚 common to hear sector experts聽such as Professor Barr, or sector bodies like UUK, say that the English funding system is unsustainable. But that argument is echoed by Mr Lewis, perhaps the single most influential figure when it comes to public opinion on student finance.
鈥淲e鈥檝e just got a broken system that actually needs quite a fundamental look鈥he system does not work for many; it鈥檚 poorly communicated; it鈥檚 fundamentally misunderstood,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 damaging to universities, who bear the brunt of the brand association, because people feel they are paying the university directly鈥ather than understanding it鈥檚 more of a hypothecated form of taxation.
鈥淭here are lots of holes in the system, but I don鈥檛 know any party聽that is prepared to tackle it properly,鈥澛燤r Lewis聽added.
糖心Vlog
In terms of knowing the balance between government and graduate investment, and ensuring that reflects the benefits to society and individuals arising from higher education, this聽month鈥檚 changes聽seem to聽head further down聽one of those holes. And the changes might, perhaps, add to the聽argument for a review of higher education funding that shines a light on cost sharing.
john.morgan@timeshighereducation.com
Loan changes聽for students starting courses from the 2023 academic year
- The repayment threshold on these 鈥淧lan 5鈥 loans frozen at 拢25,000 until 2026-27 and will then rise in line with the Retail Price Index (RPI) of inflation (for borrowers who took out the previous Plan 2 loans, the repayment threshold will be 拢27,295 in 2023-24).聽
- Repayment period after which outstanding loan balances are written off extended from 30 to 40 years.
- Interest rate on loans will be the rate of RPI inflation (rather than the old system of RPI plus up to 3 per cent).
- The changes mean that the 鈥渉ighest lifetime earners can expect to repay significantly less than if they had started university in 2022, as a result of the lower interest rate,鈥 the . 鈥淟ow-earning graduates can expect to repay considerably more, as they will repay more each year because of the lower repayment threshold and will make repayments for more years due to the extended loan term.鈥
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