Student Loans Company 3.40 pm Gordon Marsden
(Blackpool South) (Lab) (Urgent Question): To ask the
Secretary of State for Education if she will make a statement on
the management and operation of the Student Loans Company. The
Minister for Universities, Science, Research and Innovation (Joseph
Johnson) The Student Loans...Request free trial
Student Loans Company
3.40 pm
-
(Blackpool South)
(Lab)
(Urgent Question): To ask the Secretary of State for
Education if she will make a statement on the management
and operation of the Student Loans Company.
-
The Minister for Universities, Science, Research and
Innovation (Joseph Johnson)
The Student Loans Company’s performance has improved year
on year for the past six years. SLC services account for
about 1.8 million applications per year. It responds to
about 4.5 million phone calls from borrowers and has more
than 6 million repaying or due-to-repay customers, with
loans totalling over £100 billion. In addition, it has
delivered a range of new products for the Government on
time and successfully, including postgraduate loans and
simplified advanced learner loans.
This year, the SLC has processed more than 1.4 million
applications for student funding, and so far this academic
year it has paid out approximately £2.5 billion in
maintenance funding and £2 billion in tuition fee payments
to providers. Customer satisfaction remains high, at about
85%, and, for borrowers in repayment, at about 72%. It
receives complaints from just 0.1% of its 4.7 million
customers. The SLC is, of course, constantly looking to
learn lessons from this low level of complaints and to use
these complaints to improve the quality of its services.
The Department for Education is also working closely with
the SLC on a range of initiatives that will further improve
the user experience for the SLC’s borrowers and in respect
of staff engagement. Proposals currently being developed
included greater digitisation of the student loan
application and repayment processes and investment in more
efficient SLC systems.
Following two independent investigations into allegations
about aspects of his managements and leadership, the SLC
has terminated Steve Lamey’s contract as chief executive
officer of the SLC. The SLC and its shareholders expect the
highest standards of management and leadership and, having
taken into account the findings of the investigations, have
concluded that these were not being upheld by Mr Lamey
during his time in his role. The SLC board acted swiftly
and has appointed the current chief executive of the
Education and Skills Funding Agency and of the Institute
for Apprenticeships, Peter Lauener, as interim CEO, with
effect from 27 November. He will remain in post at SLC
until a permanent appointment is made.
Mr Lauener was formerly chief executive of the Institute
for Apprenticeships and the Education and Skills Funding
Agency. He has had a long and successful career in a number
of senior leadership positions in the Department and its
partner organisations, and I have every confidence that he
will provide the drive and stability the SLC requires at
this time, as we recruit a permanent chief executive.
-
This announcement was snuck out over the November recess on
the same day as the Secretary of State for International
Development resigned. Since last Monday, two articles in
The Times have raised severe questions about the process.
Why, in the Minister’s letter to me on 17 October, sent six
weeks after I wrote to him about the SLC, did he refer to
the suspension of the chief executive as a neutral act that
did not imply wrongdoing, when he was actually made fully
aware of the allegations against Steve Lamey in June, as
his written reply has told me?
Will the Minister publish the findings of the performance
review of the SLC, issued two months before the suspension,
in which, as The Times says, Steve Lamey was rated
“outstanding”? Was the Minister aware at the time that Mr
Jenkins’s report on Mr Lamey had concluded that he was
“making a real and positive difference”
to the Student Loans Company, and was a popular and
effective leader who staff found supportive, before the
decision was made to sack him? Will he also publish the
findings of the internal investigation, in which 52 of 58
allegations against Mr Lamey were dismissed, so that all
Members can understand the issues at the SLC?
Who appointed the chair and the other three board members
of the SLC, and what were the criteria and processes for
those appointments? Can the Minister confirm that Simon
Devonshire, the board member who heard and dismissed Mr
Lamey’s appeal, and David Gravells are also members of the
same venture capital trust?
The lack of proper co-operation between the SLC and HMRC
has led to significant overpayment of debts. Can the
Minister tell us how many overpayments amounting to more
than £10,000 have been made since 2015-16? I have just been
told that the Government have tacitly admitted their
failure in this regard by saying that from 2019 onwards,
HMRC and the SLC will co-operate on these matters. However,
that does not address the fact that Mr Lamey and the HMRC’s
permanent secretary have blamed each other for the issue.
Mr Lamey has claimed that he asked for real-time updates
that HMRC would not share. Who is telling the truth?
The BBC’s “Panorama” has raised questions about private
providers of courses in which students have fraudulently
enrolled in order to claim loans. How much has been paid to
students of private higher education providers who were
subsequently determined to be ineligible in the last five
full financial years, and what mechanisms are there to
enable the misused taxpayer money to be reclaimed? In light
of all that, will the Government now suspend the sale of a
further chunk of the student loan book?
The Minister recently admitted that changes in interest
rate thresholds on student debt would cost £175 million by
2020. Can he tell us where the money will come from? Given
that tens of thousands of graduates are footing the bill
for SLC failures, what confidence can Parliament have in
the competence of this Minister, who is the key shareholder
in the Student Loans Company?
-
I would encourage the hon. Gentleman not to denigrate the
hard work of the dedicated public servants at the Student
Loans Company, who are undertaking a vital task in securing
the finance that young people and learners in this country
need to pursue higher education and who, as I have said,
are doing so in a successful way: fewer than 0.1% of the
SLC’s 4.7 million customers complain each year. They are
delivering an important service, and the hon. Gentleman
should support them rather than running them down.
The hon. Gentleman asked about a number of matters. He
asked about the investigations that led to the dismissal of
Mr Lamey from his position as chief executive of the SLC.
The concerns were brought to the board’s attention in May,
and to the attention of the Department for Education.
-
When did you learn about it?
-
We learnt about it in May.
-
But when did you learn about it?
-
I learnt about it in May, as I have just said. The two
investigations were immediately set in motion to get the
bottom of the allegations received by the SLC board. One
was led by the Government Internal Audit Agency, and the
other by Sir Paul Jenkins, former Treasury Solicitor and
head of the Government’s legal services. They concluded
that Mr Lamey had not shown the leadership which would be
expected of someone in that role, and accordingly the board
decided that he should no longer continue in the role. As a
consequence of the SLC’s decision, the Department decided
to relieve him of his responsibilities as accounting
officer of the SLC.
The hon. Gentleman asked about ineligible payments, some of
which were highlighted by the “Panorama” programme that was
broadcast a few days ago. I am sure he will be interested
to know that the level of ineligible payments made to
alternative providers has been falling sharply in recent
years. In fact, it has fallen by over 80% since 2012-13,
from about 4% of all payments to 0.5% of all payments in
2015-16. This rate is low; of course we want to eliminate
fraud wherever we can identify it, but this is a low rate
of ineligible payments to these providers. Indeed, the rate
is now no higher than the average across the HEFCE-funded
higher education system. So if I was the hon. Gentleman, I
would not use this as a means of running down the newer
entrants to our higher education system—which he often does
from the Dispatch Box—because it cannot be used to support
that sort of attack. This reduction in the level of
ineligible payments is the direct consequence of the
controls that previously the Department for Business,
Innovation and Skills and now the Department for Education
have been putting in place to ensure that public money is
not abused.
We take the issue of overpayments extremely seriously, and
the hon. Gentleman mentioned some of the steps we are
taking. We want close and effective co-operation between
HMRC and the SLC so we avoid the risk, to the extent that
we possibly can, of students overpaying when they repay. I
understand that the Chancellor will be considering this
issue further in the Budget later this week, so the hon.
Gentleman might want to wait to see the contents of the
Budget for further details. We are committed to improving
the interface between HMRC and the SLC. We ensure that all
borrowers, as they enter the last two years of their
repayments, are given the opportunity to move directly to a
direct debit system of repayment, so that they eliminate
almost all the risk of overpayment.
-
(Harlow) (Con)
I welcome the Minister’s efforts to reform the SLC, and he
will know that our Select Committee on Education is doing a
value-for-money inquiry into universities. As well as
looking at the management of the SLC, will the Minister use
this opportunity to look at reducing the rate of interest
for students, which is much higher than in many other
countries in the developed world?
-
We keep all aspects of our student finance system under
review, to ensure that it is fair and effective as a
system, and that it is meeting our core objectives of
removing financial barriers to access, funding our
university system fairly, and sharing the costs of doing so
equitably between individual students and the general
taxpayer. The rate of interest is heavily subsidised. This
is to be compared with unsecured personal commercial
borrowings. The Bank of England benchmark reference rate
for unsecured personal commercial borrowing would be well
over 7%, and this is a particularly unique product, which
is written off entirely after 30 years with no recourse to
a borrower’s other assets, and it only enters the repayment
period when people are earning more than £25,000. So it is
a unique product, and it is not easy to compare any element
of it with loan offerings from elsewhere in the commercial
sector.
-
(Glasgow North West)
(SNP)
In recent years the SLC has been plagued by mishaps,
complaints of inefficient bureaucracy, and poor customer
service. The latest student loan sell-off is also
concerning; we saw the problems for many graduates,
receiving letters telling them they must pay even though
their earnings had not reached the repayment level. Can the
Minister confirm that the SLC will not now, or in the
foreseeable future, syphon loans off to a third party?
Devolved Administrations are shareholders in the SLC. Can
the Minister outline the discussions he has had with fellow
shareholders on the circumstances of the dismissal of the
chief executive of that company?
Over 1,400 people are employed by the SLC in Glasgow. Can
the Government confirm that any shake-up of practices will
not involve a plan to move any part of the company from
Glasgow and that all employees will have an opportunity to
be consulted in any future discussions?
At a time when graduates are paying up to 6.1% in loan
interest, student debt in England is nearly treble what it
is in Scotland, so does the Minister not think that, while
SLC could use a radical-shake up and reform, his policies
could, too? The Budget is just around the corner, so while
the Minister works to clear up the managerial problems, why
does he not clear up the mess of his policy and stop
saddling English students with the millstone of debt around
their necks?
-
I am not sure that we need lessons from Scotland on our
higher education policies. Over successive Administrations
in this country, those policies have resulted in levels of
access for people from disadvantaged backgrounds that
should frankly be the envy of Scottish National party
Members rather than a source of criticism. The hon. Lady
asked about the work that SLC staff do from its location in
Glasgow, and of course that is valued. We support
everything they are doing to ensure that the SLC continues
to perform at the level that we all want it to, as an
important agency of the Department for Education. As I have
said, it is now in its sixth consecutive year of
improvement in all its operational metrics, and we want
that to continue. I am sure that Glasgow will play its part
in that.
-
(Henley) (Con)
Would the Minister like to explain what role the Office for
Students will play in this, and how it will help?
-
The new Office for Students comes into existence
progressively from 1 January 2018, with its full
operational existence commencing in April 2018. The Student
Loans Company has its own statutory existence, independent
of the Office for Students, and it will continue to carry
out its vital function of ensuring that the loans we make
available to remove barriers to access to higher education
continue to be made available seamlessly to the students
who are in need of them.
-
Several hon. Members rose—
-
Mr Speaker
Order. I am looking at all these very academic colleagues,
and of course my eye immediately focuses on .
-
(City of Durham)
(Lab)
Thank you, Mr Speaker. I hope the Minister appreciates that
the problems at the SLC go beyond the actions, or lack of
them, of the previous chief executive. The Jenkins report
pointed to “bad behaviour” among the whole of the executive
leadership team. Will the Minister tell us what that bad
behaviour is, how long he has known about it and what
action is being taken to stop it?
-
The SLC board has taken prompt action to address the
shortcomings in the leadership of the company that were
identified in the two investigations that I have mentioned:
the Government Internal Audit Agency report and the report
by Sir Paul Jenkins. I have every confidence that the new
chief executive we have put in place, Peter Lauener, who
has worked successfully across a range of Department for
Education partner organisations including the Institute for
Apprenticeships, will do the job that we need him to do.
-
(Horsham) (Con)
Picking up on the Minister’s reply about the Office for
Students, what role does he see it playing in driving value
for money across further education for our students?
-
Of course value for money is a critical part of our
reforms, as it has been since the Green Paper, the White
Paper and the Higher Education and Research Act 2017. We
want the SLC to hold universities to account for the
tuition fee income that they receive from the SLC, and to
ensure that students are made aware of where the best
teaching is available across the system and where really
good outcomes are emanating from specific higher education
institutions. We want that to be made clearer to students
so that they can make informed choices about where to
study, and so that universities can be held to account for
the use of public resources.
-
(Enfield,
Southgate) (Lab)
An external audit of the SLC placed it at the bottom of all
organisations in 35 out of the 36 criteria against which it
was assessed. Can the Minister tell us what those criteria
were?
-
I cannot tell the hon. Gentleman the precise criteria
against which the SLC was assessed. I can tell him that the
organisation is steadily improving from when the coalition
Government inherited it in 2010. As I have said, it is in
its sixth consecutive year of performance improvement, and
that is something that we should be celebrating. No one is
denying that all organisations have room for improvement,
and we want to work with the company to ensure that steps
are taken in particular to improve the interface between
itself and HMRC.
-
(Chippenham)
(Con)
Does the Minister agree that it is imperative not only that
university students get value for money but that they are
able to see where their money goes, and that both of those
elements will be promoted by the Office for Students, which
will be launched on 1 January?
-
I am happy to confirm that. Indeed, we are consulting on
the new regulatory framework that the Office for Students
will use as its operating manual. Among the things that we
are consulting on is how we can clarify to students how
institutions use their tuition fee income so that they—and
the Government—can be confident that that income is
supporting the core activities that we intend it to be used
for: teaching, producing world-class research, and helping
students to go on to get great outcomes in the world of
work.
-
Mr (Tottenham) (Lab)
I have huge sympathy for Mr Lamey—not least because he has
such a fantastic surname—but I also have sympathy for the
Minister, because I have been in his shoes. Given the
failure of the SLC to which colleagues have alluded, it is
important that the House understands how often over the
past year the Minister met Mr Lamey, the chairman and the
senior management team. In the spirit of probity, will the
Minister put before the House a list of those meetings so
that the proper inquiries can be made?
-
I would of course be happy to do that, but I remind the
right hon. Gentleman that the SLC is in many ways a
successful organisation, so we should not denigrate it.
Opposition Members are doing a massive disservice to public
servants who are working hard in Darlington and in Glasgow
to ensure that students are getting access to the finance
they need to undertake higher education. It is an
achievement for an organisation to have 4.7 million
customers but to receive complaints from less than 0.1% of
them each year, so we should not endlessly run the SLC
down. Of course it has room to improve, and the Government
are committed to helping it do so.
-
(Beckenham)
(Con)
What does my hon. Friend consider to be the most
significant change brought about by the Higher Education
and Research Act 2017?
-
Mr Speaker
Order. That question is not altogether adjacent to the
matter of the management and operation of the Student Loans
Company. If I am being very polite to the hon. Gentleman,
which I invariably am, I will say that his inquiry is at
best tangential. It has at best a nodding acquaintance with
the SLC, but no better than that. However, the Minister is
a versatile and dextrous fellow, and I feel sure that he
will be able to handle the matter eloquently and pithily.
-
Thank you, Mr Speaker.
Students receive their funding indirectly from the Student
Loans Company, and universities receive their funding
directly from it, so it is vital that there is a strong
relationship and that students feel that they are getting
value for money from the funding that the SLC provides. The
spirit of the Higher Education and Research Act 2017 is to
promote value for money in our system, and to ensure that
universities are delivering great teaching, great research
and great outcomes for students.
-
Mr Speaker
The Minister is not known as a considerable boffin for
nothing.
-
Mr (Huddersfield)
(Lab/Co-op)
The Minister mentioned denigration, but no Opposition
Member would denigrate the Student Loans Company. In fact,
the SLC has offered a good service to many students and
parents. If we compare it with our commercial banking
sector, in which so many people should have gone to prison,
the SLC has done very well indeed. Is there some secret
agenda here? This Government are about to sell off £4
billion of student loans, and who is leading that
consortium? It is British banks led by Barclays.
-
I thank the hon. Gentleman for acknowledging the good work
that the SLC does—it is important that we all recognise
that. The sale of the student loan book is a policy that
the previous Labour Government made possible following the
passage of the Sale of Student Loans Act 2008, so there is
considerable cross-party recognition of the importance of
ensuring the sustainability of our public finances. The
sale of the student loan book, which was made possible by
the previous Labour Government, is something that this
Government are quite prepared to continue.
-
(Aldridge-Brownhills)
(Con)
When we talk about student loans and access to university,
we often quite rightly talk about disadvantaged students.
Does my hon. Friend recognise that the current system has
created opportunities for such students?
-
My hon. Friend is right that the income-contingent student
loan repayment system has made a huge expansion of access
to higher education possible. I have referred to this
statistic several times while speaking at the Dispatch Box:
young people from disadvantaged backgrounds are 43% more
likely to go to university or other higher education today
than they were in 2009-10, which is a direct result of
successive Governments deciding to share the cost of higher
education equitably between students and the general
taxpayer.
-
(Kingston upon Hull
North) (Lab)
Will the Minister have another go at the question put to
him by the right hon. Member for Harlow (Robert Halfon),
the Chair of the Education Committee, as to exactly why our
students have to pay such a high rate of interest compared
with those in other countries?
-
Many hon. Members are under the impression that all
students in the repayment period are paying a 6% interest
rate, which is of course wrong. Only between 2% and 5% of
students in that period are paying rates of about 6.1%.
Most students in the repayment period are paying somewhere
between RPI and RPI plus 3. That takes us from RPI, which
is roughly 3%, all the way to around 6.1%. Students are
paying a spectrum of interest rates, and only those earning
more than £42,000 in the repayment period will be paying
the high rate of interest that has caught the imagination.
From the statistics I have, that represents between 2% and
5% of students.
-
(Lichfield)
(Con)
Notwithstanding my hon. Friend’s previous answer, is it not
the case that far fewer people from deprived backgrounds
now go to university? At least that is what I have heard
from the Labour party—or has it got that wrong?
-
Yes, I am afraid the Labour party has got that wrong. As I
have just said, the rate at which students from the most
disadvantaged backgrounds are going to university has
jumped sharply over the past six or seven years. They are
now 43% more likely to go into higher education than they
were in 2009-10.
-
(Edinburgh West)
(LD)
As the mother of a daughter with a student loan, I was
appalled by a BBC report of evidence that education agents
are recruiting bogus students to private colleges to
defraud the taxpayer of thousands of pounds in student
loans. What are the Department, the Quality Assurance
Agency for Higher Education and the Student Loans Company
doing to detect and prevent bogus students? For instance,
will the Government legislate to ban essay mills?
-
The Department takes allegations of fraud and malpractice
extremely seriously, and we are grateful to “Panorama” for
bringing to our attention the fraud allegations it aired in
relation to student loans at three private providers. Fraud
devalues the work of honest providers and students. Working
with stakeholders, including the City of London police, we
will take robust action where abuses of the system are
evident.
To put this in context, it is vital we remember that the
number of ineligible payments to such providers is very
low. It is about 0.5% of all payments, and that has come
down sharply from 4% in 2012-13. The rate is no higher than
the rate of ineligible payments across the rest of the
Higher Education Funding Council-funded, or publicly
funded, world of higher education.
-
(Torbay) (Con)
The Minister will agree that one of the key ways of judging
the success of the student loan finance system is the
number of people from disadvantaged backgrounds who are
going to university. What role does he see for access
agreements in particular alongside the support provided by
the SLC?
-
Access agreements play a vital role. The funding now
flowing through access agreements to support widening
participation has doubled over recent years and now stands
at well over £800 million a year. Access agreements are
driving progress in widening participation, and the rate at
which people from the most disadvantaged 20% of households
are accessing higher education has jumped, with the figure
now standing at more than 20% of that particular group.
-
(Ilford North)
(Lab)
Given that Mr Lamey has criticised the lack of support from
the Department for Education, and given that this House has
had to rely on various media reports that paint a picture
of a Student Loans Company plagued by bullying, low morale
and high sickness rates, is it not in the public interest
that the Jenkins report is put into the public domain, not
least so that Committees of this House can properly
scrutinise the performance of the Student Loans Company and
the support provided by the Department for Education?
-
This is an employment matter between Mr Lamey and the SLC.
The Department for Education has taken quick action in
response to the two reports by the GIAA and Sir Paul
Jenkins. It suspended Mr Lamey from his role as accounting
officer and took quick steps to put in place new
management, in the form of Peter Lauener, to take the SLC
forward in the coming months and years.
-
(Corby) (Con)
I declare my interest, in so far as I am currently repaying
a student loan. What involvement does my hon. Friend see
for Ministers or the new Office for Students in the
appointment of a new permanent chief executive?
-
I think we can all agree that my hon. Friend is a good
advertisement for the student loans system—he is a good
outcome from his particular institution. The OFS will not
have a direct role in the appointment of the new SLC chief
executive. That will be a matter for its board, and of
course it is a ministerial appointment as well.
-
Dr (Ealing Central and Acton)
(Lab)
The incompetence of the Student Loans Company is seen in
things ranging from its scaremongering fake debt collection
letters, to the predicament of my constituent Sibhoz Hallet
of Acton, who is perversely barred from working any
overtime as her debt would double—that is not an anomaly,
but the norm. Is it not apparent that by exposing the SLC
as a mess, with 50% of calls mishandled at peak times,
Steve Lamey was dismissed for telling the truth?
-
Mr Lamey did not live up to the standards the SLC board
felt were required for his role, so it took action to
dismiss him, and the Department for Education followed on
by removing his function as accounting officer. We want the
SLC to continue to be a high-performing organisation, and
we should remember that overall it is a successful
organisation, with just 0.1% of its customers complaining
every year. Many private sector organisations would envy
such a record.
-
(Carmarthen East and
Dinefwr) (PC)
In his initial response, the Minister referred to last
week’s “Panorama” revelations. Is he aware of any Welsh
higher education institutions that have been caught up in
fraudulent activity, and what discussions has he had with
the Welsh Government?
-
I am personally not aware of any such allegations, but they
would be a matter for the Higher Education Funding Council
for Wales and the Welsh regulatory authorities. If the hon.
Gentleman is aware of any, he should not lose any time in
relaying his concerns to the appropriate bodies.
-
(Wirral West)
(Lab)
This chaos at the SLC adds insult to injury for those who
are paying off these huge debts following graduation. A
constituent who came to see me last Friday showed me his
SLC statement. He is a paramedic who is doing an important,
highly-skilled job in our emergency services. He completed
his training with more than £28,000 of debt. He has paid
off £1,084 since April 2016, but the SLC has applied
£878.10 interest during that period. He said to me, “It’s
no wonder graduates are tempted to leave the country.” What
would the Minister say to him?
-
We want the student repayment experience to be as simple,
smooth and effective as possible, and it is striking that
the level of complaints is as low as it is. Of course there
will be complaints, such as that made to the hon. Lady by
her constituent, and she is right to raise it. We want to
learn from all student experience, and the SLC does learn
from the relatively few complaints it gets—it is important
to do so.
-
(Leeds North West)
(Lab/Co-op)
I have been in contact with Leeds University union about
many cases, particularly those involving overpayment. One
student was given incorrect information and made a
repayment, but now cannot get a further loan, having been
told by the SLC that he had made a voluntary repayment.
Another student was given four years’ loan but was
subsequently told that he did not meet the residency
requirement, so the full amount has now been demanded, even
though the SLC admits that that was its mistake. How will
the Minister ensure that students are treated fairly when
the SLC makes a mistake and students are already deeply in
debt?
-
Of course we want all students in repayment to be treated
fairly by the SLC and we take the issue of overpayments
particularly seriously. As I said in response to the hon.
Member for Blackpool South (Gordon Marsden), we can expect
to hear more on the theme of overpayments and the
interaction between the SLC and Her Majesty’s Revenue and
Customs in a couple of days’ time at the Budget.
-
(Eltham) (Lab)
The Minister seems complacent about the extent of fraud. He
can report to us only the amount of fraud that is known
about but, by their very nature, the people who carry out
fraud are devious. Did the “Panorama” programme suggest to
him an area of fraudulent activity of which he was not
aware before? What action did he take in response to what
was exposed by that programme?
-
The hon. Gentleman is of course right that the nature of
fraud is such that we only really have a sighting shot at
understanding its extent in any system. We have to look at
comparable levels of ineligible payments across different
types of provider. As I said, we do not see more fraud in
the so-called alternative providers than we see in the
HEFCE-funded public part of the higher education system.
-
(Kingston upon Hull West
and Hessle) (Lab)
Last Thursday, senior NHS leaders told me about the growing
desperation to grow our own senior NHS professionals. Such
people will have to pay all the money back because their
earnings will be above the threshold, so will the Minister
look again at the interest rate they will have to pay and
the fact that they will start to accumulate interest before
they even graduate?
-
The student loan product is heavily subsidised overall.
Around 45% of loans are consciously written off by the
Government as a deliberate investment in the country’s
skills base. We do not want any financial barriers to
access, so we make the money available on very favourable
terms. The interest rate is a means of ensuring that
graduates who go on to have higher than average lifetime
earnings make a contribution towards the overall cost and
sustainability of higher education, ensuring that it
continues to drive access and widen participation
systematically across the piece.
-
Mr (Bolsover) (Lab)
Is the Minister aware that this is not subsidised enough?
There is only one solution and it stares us in the face
every time he opens his mouth: let us have free education
like we used to have, from the cradle to the grave.
-
The thing is that our system of student finance has enabled
far, far more people to go to university than the kind of
system that the hon. Gentleman advocates. In the 1950s and
1960s, when others in this House where thinking about
whether to go to university, a far smaller proportion of
each cohort of 18 to 19-year-olds was given the chance to
do so. Now almost 46% of 18 and 19-year-olds are get a
chance to go to university, and that is a world away from
the situation when we had an entirely state-funded higher
education system, which meant that it was really just the
preserve of a narrow elite.
|