- #176
xxChrisxx
- 2,056
- 85
Chewy0087 said:Ah yeah I see, but the extra money earned on average from the degree is still far in excess of £27,000. I'd wager.
Although on a point you lightly touched here, I'm in complete disagreement with the fact that one year someone will have ~£10,000 debt from the tuition, and the following cohort will be saddled with £27,000. You could be looking at someone who was born on September 1st at 00.01am who'll potentially be £17,000 worse of, I think a long term gradual scheme would have been much better. (although the government "couldn't of possibly seen this coming", sure.)
It's all ********. Why are the loans based on parents income, when the student themselves will have the debt?
As a hypothetical scenario:
You have one child from a low income background (household income of 16k, parents divorced etc). You have another from a middle income background (household income of about 40k, both parents living together).
They both go to the same University to study Engineering.
The low income background student is eligible for 1/2 tuition paid by a government grant. They also get a 2K grant on maintenance. Grants are non repayable.
As this currently stands (with top up fees to be increased). 4.5K tuition will be paid by a grant. With 2K free.So total loan per year under the new rules will be 4.5 + 4 (tuition + maintenance) and 4.5 + 2 grant.
So per year: 8.5K payable debt per year. 6.5K free.
Those coming from a family earning 40K, they are eligible for no tuition help and no grant. Meaning a loan of 9+4 = 13K debt per year.
How is that remotely fair?, both students have the same prospects but those coming from a family that is poor will get the same thing for 12-16K cheaper.
Numbers are representative (I wasn't hit with top up fees but, the percentages of tuition paid free and 2K grant are real figures) of a situation I found myself in at university. I'm pissed off with it because I'm saddled with more debt that someone I'm competing for the same job and pay with.