糖心Vlog

France urged to expand university places after equality warning

Analysts say generous grantsmore housing and better information are needed to fix inequalities driven by parental income 

Published on
December 20, 2021
Last updated
December 20, 2021
Hot air ballons being inflated to illustrate France urged to expand university places after equality warning
Source: Alamy

Economists have urged France to create tens of thousands of additional university places after research indicated that access to higher education in the country was as unequal as in the US, despite negligible tuition fees in the Gallic system.

On a 10-section scale of parental income, moving up one section increases the proportion of young people entering higher education in France by 5.7 percentage points, compared with 6.7 percentage points in the US, according to a published by France鈥檚聽independent聽Economic Analysis Council聽(CAE).听

鈥淲e thought inequalities had to be smaller because there are fewer income inequalities at the beginning: the American system has a lot of very high tuition fees,鈥 said聽S茅bastien聽Grobon, a聽PhD student at Sorbonne University and one of the authors of the study.

鈥淚t means that free higher education might be a condition for equality, but it鈥檚 not sufficient. It鈥檚 still costly because people have to pay for their living, and good universities are in big cities where the cost of living can be really substantial,鈥 said the聽study鈥檚聽other聽author, C茅cile聽Bonneau, a PhD student at the聽Paris School of Economics.听

糖心Vlog

ADVERTISEMENT

The phenomenon means that, taking into account public spending on higher education, grants to聽students, family allowances and tax deductions, the French state spends one-and-a-half times more on聽those whose parents are in the top 20 per cent of the income distribution聽than on those in the bottom 20 per cent, the study found.听

The issue of聽understanding and聽improving access for students from poorer backgrounds聽was considered in ,聽also published on 1 December,聽which considers equality and efficiency across the French higher education system.

糖心Vlog

ADVERTISEMENT

Gabrielle Fack, professor of economics聽at Paris Dauphine University and an author of the second study, highlighted the role of tracking in school examination streams and the cost of living.

鈥淭here is some self-selection and lack of information that changes the aspiration or makes the aspiration of low-income students and higher-income students quite different quite early in the process,鈥 she added.

Professor Fack said three recommendations from her study could help address the issue: increasing the value of means-tested student grants by聽鈧1,000 (拢852) per year and making them available to 66 per cent of families; providing more student housing; and increasing the number of course places available by 150,000.听聽

The Macron government has tried to fix聽income-related聽inequality by shrinking class sizes in deprived areas, something that may help but will take many years聽to show, said Professor Fack. Another measure, using quotas聽of needs-based scholarship students per programme,聽is based on聽applications聽to a course, rather than the total number of such students,聽Ms聽Bonneau said.

糖心Vlog

ADVERTISEMENT

鈥淭he problem is that the low-income, disadvantaged students,聽they do not even apply to selective programmes鈥, said聽Ms聽Bonneau.听鈥淚t hasn鈥檛 really changed the segregation in terms of social background, geographic origin and gender.鈥澛

Despite the moral and economic cases, none of the analysts was convinced that the issue would聽figure聽prominently聽in France鈥檚 election next year.听鈥淭here should be some investment in this particular group because it鈥檚 very important for the future鈥, said聽Professor聽Fack, referring to聽aspiring students from low-income backgrounds. 鈥淗owever,聽I am not super-optimistic on whether this is going to be in the debate.鈥

ben.upton@timeshighereducation.com

Register to continue

Why register?

  • Registration is free and only takes a moment
  • Once registered, you can read 3 articles a month
  • Sign up for our newsletter
Please
or
to read this article.

Related articles

Sponsored

Featured jobs

See all jobs
ADVERTISEMENT