Take loans away from richer students, suggests ex-Labour minister

Money lent to those from wealthier backgrounds to pay for university may be better spent elsewhere, says Dame Margaret Hodge 

六月 25, 2024
Source: iStock/Yori Meirizan

Further tuition fee rises in England would be “politically difficult” and impact on widening participation, according to a former universities minister who suggested that removing loans from students from wealthier families may be a “fairer” option.

Dame Margaret Hodge, an architect of the last Labour government’s top-up fees while serving as minister of state for universities between 2001 and 2003, said a “really radical” option for a future government would be to look again at who is eligible for a taxpayer-backed loan, in light of the constraints on funding the sector is experiencing.

“I am not sure why the state is providing financial support, even in the terms of loans, to students from higher income backgrounds and whether that is really, when you are talking about priorities, where we should be putting our money,” Dame Margaret told a webinar on the future of universities hosted by The Policy Institute at King’s College London.

She said that the “debt burden” was increasingly deterring people from going to university and cautioned against the “assumption” that fees can go up without consequences.

“I think that [raising fees] is politically difficult, it will impact on widening participation when we still have students from the higher socioeconomic groups being twice as likely to go to university than those from the lower socioeconomic groups.

“It holds us in a bind when I think we should be thinking about how we can help poorer students to actually access university more fairly” said Dame Margaret, who has just stepped down as an MP after 30 years in Parliament.

She questioned “why are we supporting, through the loan system, better-off students to live away from home whereas poor students are put off by the debt and never have that option to live away from home.

“If we could ask those sorts of questions from a student perspective, we may come up with a different answer within what will always be constrained resources.”

But Sir Chris Husbands, the former vice-chancellor of Sheffield Hallam University, whose paper on four possible futures for the sector was the topic of the event, cautioned against such a move.  

“We’ve got to be really careful not to over-infantilise adults and not continue to hold young people to account on the basis of their parents’ income,” he said.

Dame Margaret, who said she was not privy to the discussions of the shadow cabinet, also offered some clues into Labour thinking ahead of the election.

She said the party was always more likely to put money into the early years and further education, although there may be opportunities for universities to access this by working more closely with the latter sector. 

On the question of how the party may prevent university closures, Dame Margaret said: “I don’t think a Labour government would allow an institution to die.

“They may encourage a merger, or they may bring in somebody from outside; a commissioner of some sort to try to sort out the finances, which will entail cuts.”

Sir Chris said that any intervention would likely come before an institution got as far as bankruptcy and, although the appointment of a commissioner would present “legal challenges” given the independence of the sector, he agreed “there is going to need to be a transformatory regime”.

tom.williams@timeshighereducation.com

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Reader's comments (1)

I have been researching the impact of financial support for many years and the evidence tells us that its not the tuition fees that are the issue. The national scholarship programme was introduced for students from low income households to mitigate the impact of fees on underrepresented groups when fees were first introduced, but the scheme was terminated after 3 years because the opportunity to defer repayments on the tuition fee loan mitigated the associated risk. Students at that stage were less concerned about future debt and more concerned about how they would meet their living costs while studying. Not much has changed. As a parent of a child who is about to go to university, I can say that the tuition fees are the least of my worries! I understand the benefits of HE and I want my child to have the opportunity to attend the best institution, irrespective of where that is in the country. In our case, that happens to be London. BUT, we are only entitled to borrow the minimum maintenance loan and the cost of the Halls of Residence alone is double that amount. We are relatively fortunate, our household income is above average and we have been putting money aside, but the reality is those savings will be swallowed up in the first year and plugging that gap is going to put us under significant financial pressure, given our own living costs, like many other people's, have sky-rocketed. Withdrawing loans from anyone other than very high income families (who are less likely to be taking the loan anyway - why would you if you didn't need to given the current high cost of borrowing) would only serve to increase inequalities in access and participation and narrow students' choices about what and where to study.
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