The system of funding English higher education through student loans is 鈥渋n聽ruins鈥 and universities should instead be part-funded by graduate contributions requiring the richest to pay more, and potentially levied on those who graduated before fees, according to a report for the Higher Education Policy Institute.
The , published on 21 January, was written by former University of Central Lancashire deputy vice-chancellor Alan聽Roff.
He argues for 鈥渁聽scheme based partly on funding from the public purse and partly from securing a聽graduate contribution鈥 鈥 suggesting a聽50:50 split 鈥 with the graduate contribution being 鈥渓ifelong鈥 and set 鈥渁t聽around 6聽per cent to 8聽per cent of income in excess of an income threshold set at the current median income鈥. This, he聽says, would be 鈥渕ore transparent and more effective than the individualised debt and loan repayment approach鈥 used since 2012, when the Conservative-led coalition government slashed direct public funding and shifted funding towards student loans to help achieve its priority of reducing the deficit.
Mr Roff writes that 鈥渋f Universities聽UK, the NUS [National Union of Students] and other higher education organisations (including trade unions) were to unite to pursue the graduate contribution option, it would be far easier for politicians to be persuaded this is the way forward鈥, with the alternative being government moves 鈥渋n聽haste鈥 to cut the rapidly escalating public costs of funding higher education under the current loans system.
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He also suggests that 鈥渋t聽would be possible to consider whether those who were given free tuition fees and maintenance grants to get their degrees could reasonably be expected to pay that graduate contribution鈥. That, 鈥渁t聽a聽stroke, would enable a聽far higher percentage of the costs of higher education courses to be met by graduate contributions than could ever feasibly have been collected under the student loan scheme鈥 and 鈥渆nable the costs to be shared much more fairly on an intergenerational basis鈥.
More widely, Mr Roff notes that the Office for Budgetary Responsibility has criticised the 鈥渇iscal illusion鈥 in the government鈥檚 accounting around student loans, and that in 2018 the Office for National Statistics decided to treat the write-offs on student loans as government spending, rather than lending, adding an estimated 拢12聽billion to the deficit that year and unwinding the accounting rules that drove the creation of the 2012 system.
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鈥淭his leaves the current scheme for financing higher education in聽ruins,鈥 Mr聽Roff writes.
The collapse of the old government accounting rules around loans means that attempts to 鈥渇ix鈥 a聽model based on 鈥渋ndividualised debt鈥 and loan repayments are 鈥渄oomed to聽failure鈥, he argues.
With a shift to a wholly publicly funded system unlikely to gain public or political support, he says, part-funding via a聽graduate contribution would be the fairest solution, meaning the richest graduates could be charged higher rates and pay more than the cost of their individual higher education, reflecting the greater benefits they accrued.
Mr Roff told 探花视频: 鈥淚聽don鈥檛 think it will be easy to convince the government to make the changes I鈥檝e proposed, but I聽don鈥檛 think it鈥檚 impossible to create a聽consensual approach to聽this.鈥
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On the question of pre-fees graduate cohorts being required to make contributions, Mr Roff said he was 鈥渘ot聽suggesting that any contribution made from people of my generation is backdated to the Seventies, and so I聽don鈥檛 see this as retrospective鈥. But he continued: 鈥淪urely in this Covid-19 era, this is something my generation owes to those who are studying now or in the future.鈥
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