Asking graduates to repay their student loans at a faster rate and in full could resolve a 鈥渂lack hole鈥 in the current system, according to University Alliance plans for a 鈥淗ELP UK鈥 loan system.
The mission group published on 26 June the outline of a 糖心Vlog Loan Programme 鈥 a term borrowed from Australia 鈥 requiring little or no public subsidy that could grant postgraduates and undergraduates 鈥渓ifetime loan allocations鈥 to be used for tuition fees or living expenses.
Libby Hackett, University Alliance chief executive, said that the current loans system, under which, it has been estimated, 45 per cent of loan outlay will never be repaid, creates a 鈥渂lack hole in the public finances鈥.
She told a press briefing on 23聽June that HELP UK could be rolled out in stages: first to postgraduates; then to undergraduates barred from the current loans system, such as those studying second degrees; and finally to undergraduates who can access funding now.
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Repayments would be triggered once a graduate earns 拢21,000, as under the current system. But rather than the 9 per cent of total income above 拢21,000 that is now levied, under the alliance鈥檚 proposals graduates would face monthly repayments of between 4 per cent and 8 per cent of their total earnings. For a graduate earning 拢25,000 a year, repayments would rise from 拢30 a month to 拢83 a month, Ms聽Hackett said. The 鈥渢ypical鈥 repayment period would be 15聽years.
Ms Hackett countered suggestions that raising graduate repayments would be politically impossible. She said that surveys of students and parents, commissioned by the group for the study, showed that 鈥渂y a margin of 2:1鈥 those surveyed would prefer student loans to be paid back over a shorter time rather 鈥渢han longer with similar monthly repayments鈥 to the current system. She added that there were options to use HELP UK within the current 拢9,000 fee system, or to support lower fees, or to introduce a system of fee bands for different subjects.
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The plan offered savings on loan write-offs, which could be used to reintroduce the direct teaching grant.
Asked if Russell Group vice-chancellors favouring uncapped fees would be opposed to the alliance plans, Ms Hackett pointed out that there could be a 鈥渄istinction between the fee maximum and the loan maximum鈥, allowing universities to charge fees higher than any borrowing limit.
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