糖心Vlog

Students fight EU loan plan

Guarantee scheme will aid banks, not us, insists European Student Union. Matthew Reisz reports

Published on
November 1, 2012
Last updated
May 22, 2015

The European Student Union (ESU) has come out strongly against the European Commission鈥檚 proposed loan guarantee facility for mobile master鈥檚 students, describing it as likely to cause 鈥渕ore damage to young people instead of increas(ing) their chances for better lives鈥.

The loan facility, put forward in November 2011 as part of the Erasmus for All programme, is currently being debated by the European Council and the European Parliament. Karina Ufert, chair of the ESU, has urged both 鈥渢o listen to us, the students鈥 as they do so.

The ESU sets out its objections in what it calls a 鈥渘on-paper鈥 and argues that 鈥減roviding student support is primarily a responsibility of the member states鈥. Since a ministerial communique in 2005, it says, governments have reiterated their commitment to the 鈥渇ull portability鈥 of domestic grants and loans rather than a new scheme on the European level.

Such a scheme, the student union argues, would fail 鈥渢o ensure a full income-contingency model鈥.

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The ESU adds that the 鈥減roposal to facilitate the loans through predominantly private financial intermediaries lacks any risk analysis about the impact it will have on young people鈥檚 debt鈥, noting that 鈥淎mericans now owe more on student loans than on credit cards鈥.

Furthermore, it suggests that at EUR10,000 (拢8,000) a year, 鈥渢he maximum amount set for the loans per individual does not reflect the real needs of students to pay tuition fees and/or cover living costs in most of the attractive study destinations鈥. This would make such loans 鈥渁ccessible only for students from more privileged backgrounds鈥 and would have a negative impact on widening access and social mobility.

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It also says that indebted students would find it hard to proceed to PhD study and would be strongly incentivised to move to high-salary economies, leading to a brain drain from poorer regions.

Even more fundamental, the ESU notes, is the fact that, rather than serving students, the loan facility 鈥渁cts as a guarantee to the banks, so they would not lose their profits鈥.

The body鈥檚 member unions 鈥渉ave adopted a clear stand against the loan scheme as it is currently being discussed. ESU is a democratic structure, through its network of national unions, representing over 11 million students.鈥

The union argues that as students are 鈥渢he potential beneficiaries鈥, they must be consulted.

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Ms Ufert urged the European Council and the European Parliament 鈥渢o bin the plan and urge the Commission to come up with constructive alternatives to increase education mobility鈥.

matthew.reisz@tsleducation.com.

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