More than two in five people in Britain believe the government should cancel some or all student debt, a new survey has found.
A campaign to reform student loans has grown in momentum in recent weeks, with critics warning those on 鈥淧lan 2鈥 loans paying hefty interest charges are stuck in 鈥渁 student debt trap鈥. The government has been accused of adding a 鈥渟tealth tax鈥 to graduates鈥 earnings in England by freezing the threshold at which they pay back student loans in the budget last year.
Speaking to 聽last week, the chancellor Rachel Reeves defended the聽changes as聽鈥渇air and reasonable鈥.
But the coverage聽indicates the campaign is having an impact, with 44 per cent saying the government should write off some or all student debt, according to a聽. Forty-one聽per cent of聽people think graduates should have to pay back their loans as currently.
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Among the respondents, 36 per cent say the government should write off all student debt, 35 per cent think a portion should be reduced, and 25 per cent would prefer to forgive the additional debt accrued on top of the initial loan.
The poll, conducted at the end of January, showed that graduates unsurprisingly are more in favour of cancelling some student debt.
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Graduates on 鈥淧lan 2鈥澛爈oans pay back 9 per cent of their income over the monthly threshold.
The polling found that 63 per cent of people thought this was too high. Almost half (46 per cent) say that 3 per cent was about the right level.
Though the public appear uncomfortable with the size of the financial burden placed on graduates, they still believe it is their responsibility.
Just a third (32 per cent) say university education should be funded by taxpayers 鈥 compared聽with a third (32 per cent) who think it should be through the medium of student loans and a quarter (23 per cent) via a graduate tax.
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While many vice-chancellors have called for tuition fees to be increased, the wider public are overwhelmingly opposed.
Over two-thirds (68 per cent) say 拢9,000 fees are too high, and just 16 per cent say they are the right level. Almost half (46 per cent) say 拢3,000 fees (roughly what was charged before 2012) was about the right amount.
Alex Stanley, the vice-president for higher education at the National Union of Students, said that the 鈥渟tudent loan system isn鈥檛 working for anyone鈥.
鈥淣ot for students who are having to access food banks. Not for graduates who are paying back hundreds of pounds a month without touching the sides of the interest on their loans. And not for the government as student debt is ballooning.鈥
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He said Reeves should be 鈥渓ooking for a solution rather than doubling down on a broken system鈥 and 鈥渘eeds to stop playing politics with students and graduates鈥.
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