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Students oppose plan to reduce English loan repayment threshold

Reform of student financing expected as part of comprehensive spending review next month

Published on
September 27, 2021
Last updated
September 27, 2021
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The Westminster government appears to be on course to reduce the repayment threshold for English聽student loans, raising fears that it could hit lower-earning graduates the hardest.

According to an article in the聽, the government is considering lowering the salary threshold at which graduates start repaying their tuition fee loans from the current figure of 拢27,295. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 the plan,鈥 one minister reportedly told the newspaper.

Changes to the loan system are expected to form part of the Westminster government鈥檚 response to the Augar review of post-18 education financing in England, which recommended that the threshold should be reduced to 拢23,000. This could save the Treasury 拢2 billion a year, it has been estimated, with a decision expected to form part of the comprehensive spending review next month.

According to the FT, ministers have said that reducing the threshold to 拢20,000 鈥 as suggested in聽a recent report from the 糖心Vlog Policy Institute聽鈥 would be 鈥渢oo low鈥.

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According to the Hepi report, such a change would result in many more graduates repaying some or all of their loan and could cut the public cost of loans by almost 拢4 billion for one cohort.

Under the current system, 44 per cent of the value of student loans taken out by this autumn鈥檚 freshers will ultimately be paid by taxpayers, as under current terms outstanding balances are written off after 30 years, and four out of five borrowers never pay back their debt in full.

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Earlier this month,聽糖心Vlog听谤别辫辞谤迟别诲聽that the government was considering proposals set out by a thinktank that would 鈥渆ncourage students to seek out the courses and institutions that will offer them the greatest value鈥 by lowering the repayment threshold.

Under the EDSK proposals there would be a 鈥渢iered鈥 system of repayment rates, based on graduate earnings.

However, opposition to any reduction in the salary repayment threshold is already growing. According to a聽recent report from the Institute of Fiscal Studies聽it is 鈥渆ssentially impossible鈥 to reform England鈥檚 student loans system without hitting average earners harder than the most highly paid graduates.

Hillary Gyebi-Ababio, the National Union of Student鈥檚 vice-president for higher education, said the union was 鈥渢otally opposed鈥 to the plans.

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鈥淟ike the government鈥檚 decision to increase National Insurance contributions, this burden targets people earning lower incomes 鈥 after eighteen months of such hardship, and with the looming hike in energy prices set to hit millions of the most vulnerable this winter, the injustice is simply astounding,鈥 she said. 鈥淭he government must re-envision education, and begin to view it as a right for all, not a product that can be bought and sold for individual gain.鈥

Henry Parkes, a senior economist at the Institute for Public Policy Research, told the FT that lowering the threshold would be 鈥渧irtually indistinguishable from a tax rise targeted at young workers alone鈥.

The University and College Union has already stated that threshold changes that hit 鈥渢he least affluent hardest鈥 would be 鈥減articularly regressive鈥.

anna.mckie@timeshighereducation.com

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Reader's comments (1)

More nuclear warheads/Trident/'galactic' Britain or free FE/HE tuition? That's a poser.

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