The Higher Education Policy Institute has published a new report
on the student finance system in England, Student Finance in
England from 2012 to 2020: From fiscal illusion to graduate
contribution? (HEPI Debate Paper 25).
Written by Alan Roff, the former Deputy Vice-Chancellor at the
University of Central Lancashire, the new paper considers the
implications of the official acceptance that the current student
loan scheme is based on a ‘fiscal illusion’ that has understated
the costs to the Exchequer by billions of pounds a year.
It argues the scheme should be replaced with a new and more
transparent graduate contribution scheme that would remove the
debts currently incurred by students, enable costs to be shared
more equitably and, potentially, reduce the cost to the
Exchequer.
The report discusses the conclusions of the Office for Budget
Responsibility and the Office for National Statistics, which
suggest the vast majority of graduates will not fully repay their
student loans and that most of the total amount loaned to
students will not be repaid.
As a result, the cost of the scheme has previously been
underestimated by around £15 billion per year, wiping out the
predicted savings to the Exchequer. Student loan write-offs are
now included in the national accounts when the loans are made
rather than 30 years after repayments begin.
Alan Roff argues the student loan scheme is unviable and that
there are no affordable ways of fixing it: the individualised
basis makes it impossible to secure more funding from the best
paid graduates after they have repaid their own debts or to
increase repayments in an affordable way for lower-paid
graduates.
The report’s recommendations include:
- abolishing the current individualised loan scheme and the
huge debts students incur;
- recognising that both individuals and society benefit from
people achieving degree-level qualifications;
- continuing to allow undergraduates to study without up-front
fees;
- retaining the principle that graduates should continue to
make a contribution to the cost of their education;
- basing the contribution on a graduate’s ability to pay as
well as on political decisions about the right percentage of the
pooled costs to be paid by graduate contributions; and
- possibly levying graduate contributions on those who gained
their degrees in the era of grant-funded study.
Alan Roff said:
‘The rationale for the 2012 scheme is in tatters. It has imposed
huge unrepayable debts on the millions of students who have
graduated in the last six years in order to create savings to the
Exchequer which are illusory. It is not sustainable to retain a
loan and debt repayment system in which loans are not loans,
debts are not debts and repayments are not repayments.
‘The graduate contribution scheme which is outlined in this paper
offers a new approach. It would ensure students can study without
paying up-front fees and without incurring huge debts. In
fairness to those who do not gain the benefits of higher
education, graduates would make an affordable contribution to the
costs of providing higher education, dependent only upon their
ability to pay. This could be done in a way which would still
reduce the cost to the Exchequer.
‘The students who started their undergraduate courses in autumn
2020 had already suffered from school closures and then the
chaotic shambles of A-level results. This year, despite the huge
efforts of staff at universities and other higher education
institutions, they and all other students have had their studies
seriously disrupted. We must show our support for these students
and those cohorts who will follow them by creating a better,
fairer system for funding students and universities.
‘I was one of the lucky generation who got my undergraduate
degree without incurring fees or debts. Those graduating now and
in the future have a right to expect the Government to ensure
that the older generation of graduates also make an affordable
contribution to the costs of higher education. After all that has
happened in the last year, surely we owe them that?’
In a Foreword to the report, , the Director of HEPI, notes the significance of the
arguments to debates throughout the UK, writing:
‘The ideas are relevant across the UK, as higher education
finance continues to be fiercely debated in Scotland, Wales and
Northern Ireland as well as at Westminster. Indeed, given the
state of the finances at some Scottish, Welsh and Northern Irish
higher education institutions and the forthcoming devolved
elections in these three areas of the UK, some might feel the
arguments could prove even more pertinent there.’
Notes for Editors
- HEPI was established in 2002 to help shape the higher
education debate with evidence. It is the UK’s only independent
think tank devoted to higher education. HEPI is a non-partisan
charity funded by higher education institutions and others that
wish to see a vibrant policy debate.
- Some of HEPI’s recent work on student finance includes
reports on students’ opinions about
different funding options, means-tested fees and
different fees for different
courses. HEPI’s original analysis of the current system by
John Thompson and Bahram Bekhradnia is still available here.
- Alan Roff is a member of Council at the University of Salford
but the views expressed in the report are his alone.