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Credit: AlamyIt doesn鈥檛 add up: thinktank raises questions over a policy about whose cost the government, 鈥榦n its own admission鈥, has 鈥榥o idea鈥
The true cost of the new student loans system will be much higher than the government has predicted and could wipe out all its claimed savings from replacing direct public funding with higher tuition fees, according to an analysis by the 糖心Vlog Policy Institute.
The report, published today, says that a combination of the understatement of loan costs and the inflationary impact of higher fees on other government spending could mean that the changes鈥 impact on reducing the deficit is 鈥減erhaps less than zero鈥.
Higher than expected spending on loans means 鈥渟erious鈥 consequences for universities and graduates in the shape of more funding cuts or tougher loan repayment terms, says the report, The Cost of the Government鈥檚 Reforms of the Financing of 糖心Vlog.
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The document - by John Thompson, a former chief analyst at the 糖心Vlog Funding Council for England, and Bahram Bekhradnia, director of Hepi - updates the thinktank鈥檚 previous analysis of the cost of the White Paper proposals, which was published in August 2011.
In the White Paper of June 2011, the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills estimated that 30 per cent of all the money loaned to students would be written off. However, Hepi notes, the impact assessment published alongside the White Paper cited a higher figure, 32 per cent. The discrepancy, which 鈥渉as never been explained鈥, amounts to an extra 拢190 million in spending a year, the report says.
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The proportion of the loan outlay that will never be repaid is known as the resource accounting and budgeting (RAB) charge. This portion of the government鈥檚 spending on loans impacts on the deficit.
In August, BIS published new modelling on the RAB charge that uses the latest Office for Budget Responsibility projections on earnings. Hepi says these OBR data 鈥渃an be interpreted鈥 as forecasting a 1.3 per cent annual average increase.
Hepi adds that BIS is now predicting that, 30 years from now, male graduates will earn on average 拢76,500 a year in real terms, down from the 拢99,500 forecast in the White Paper costings.
By lowering estimated repayments to the loans system, this change 鈥渋ncreases the RAB costs by 1.7 percentage points鈥, Hepi says.
The new BIS model continues to assume that the average tuition fee loan is about 拢7,500. But using data on average fees from the Office for Fair Access, Hepi estimates that the average fee in 2012-13 is 拢8,234. This adds another 1.4 percentage points to the RAB charge, the report says.
That鈥檚 no endorsement, Mr Willetts
The authors write that David Willetts, the universities and science minister, 鈥渟hould stop saying鈥 that the respected Institute for Fiscal Studies has endorsed the government鈥檚 estimate of a 30 per cent RAB cost.
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In fact, the IFS estimated an RAB cost of 33 per cent, while its 鈥減essimistic scenario鈥 - based on average earnings growth of 1.5 per cent - estimated an RAB cost of 37 per cent.
The IFS estimate 鈥渨as always higher than the government鈥檚, and the (IFS) projection that most closely incorporates the government鈥檚 present assumption of long-term earnings growth has an RAB cost of at least 37 per cent,鈥 Hepi says. 鈥淭he difference between an RAB cost of 30 per cent and one of 37 per cent amounts to 拢0.68 billion per year.鈥
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Tuition fees are included in the calculation of the consumer prices index of inflation, and the OBR estimates that higher fees will add 0.2 per cent to inflation when introduced this year. This means that they will lead to bigger rises in some state benefits and civil service pensions, which are increased annually in line with the CPI, Hepi says.
Hepi develops a scenario using its lower figure for the inflationary impact of higher fees on government spending (拢420 million), an RAB value equivalent to the IFS鈥 pessimistic estimate of 37 per cent and 鈥渁 more realistic fee loan assumption of 拢8,000鈥.
The increased cost to the government, it says, 鈥渨ill be over 拢1 billion a year. This sort of cost would very largely eliminate the savings that the government claims its policies will generate of 拢1.3 billion per year. A slightly higher RAB cost or a slightly greater inflationary effect than [鈥 we have considered here would mean that the present policy is actually more expensive than the one it has replaced.鈥
The report also notes Mr Willetts鈥 admission to the BIS select committee that the RAB charge is uncertain.
Hepi expresses concern over 鈥渢he fact that the government is implementing a policy about whose cost, on its own admission, it can have no clear idea and which is potentially building up large liabilities for future generations to redeem鈥.
A BIS spokeswoman said its 鈥渋nformed estimate鈥 of the RAB charge 鈥渟its in the middle of the debate鈥, with 鈥渟ome experts [claiming] our estimate is too high鈥. She added: 鈥淎ll long-term estimates have a margin of error, but we continue to believe our modelling is reasonable.鈥
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