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Student loans inquiry responses show ‘massive scale of frustration and upset’

The Guardian Rupert Jones 0 переглядів 4 хв читання
Six people dressed in shark costumes, some wearing masks of the chancellor, Rachel Reeves
Students outside the Houses of Parliament campaign for student loan reform in February. Photograph: Sean Smith/The Guardian
Students outside the Houses of Parliament campaign for student loan reform in February. Photograph: Sean Smith/The Guardian
Student loans inquiry responses show ‘massive scale of frustration and upset’

More than 52,000 people respond to Commons committee’s call for evidence amid criticism of loan terms

Thousands of graduates have told an official inquiry their horror stories and bad experiences relating to student loans, underlining what the chair of an MPs’ committee called massive levels of “frustration and upset”.

Amid an ongoing row over the ballooning cost of degree course debts, more than 52,000 people responded to a call for evidence by the Commons Treasury select committee as part of its inquiry into student loans and the taxation of graduates.

In recent months, pressure has been building on the government to reform the student loans system, with some politicians and campaigners claiming that the interest rates and loan terms are punitive and unfair.

Why the student loans row is escalating and what it means for graduatesRead more

The debate has focused on the millions of students from England and Wales who have taken out a “plan 2” loan. Many have money taken from their wages each month to repay their debt, but what they pay off is often dwarfed by the interest that is being added every month, so the sums they owe get bigger.

The catalyst for the latest row was the chancellor’s decision to freeze the salary threshold for plan 2 loan repayments for three years. This threshold, above which graduates have to repay 9% of anything they earn, will now stay frozen at £29,385 until 2030.

MPs invited people to contribute their experiences and views on student debt. Some claimed the interest rates were “extortionate” and “higher than my mortgage”, while others said they had been assured repayment thresholds would rise with inflation.

One respondent said the repayments acted “like a tax on ambition”. Another said: “I was told it would be less than a phone bill and barely noticeable. I am now an adult paying back hundreds of pounds a month. It was a complete lie.”

Of the 49,357 respondents who took out student loans, 92% said they thought the level of interest and repayment terms were “not reasonable”, while 81% said the financial impact of repaying their loan combined with the level of tax was worse than they expected.

More than half (57%) said they had not understood the terms and conditions of their student loans before they took them out.

Meg Hillier outdoors, smiling
Meg Hillier, the chair of the Treasury select committee, said MPs must listen. Photograph: Jill Mead/The Guardian

Meg Hillier, the chair of the Treasury committee, said: “The massive scale and strength of frustration and upset is powerful and, as MPs, we must listen.”

The decision to freeze the salary threshold for repayments has triggered accusations of “mis-selling”, because when plan 2 was announced by the coalition government in 2010, ministers said it would “be uprated annually in line with earnings”.

The Treasury committee also published official student loan promotional materials that it had received from the Department for Education (DfE), some of which repeated the claim that the threshold would be “adjusted annually in line with average earnings”.

While many graduates are now seeing three-figure sums taken from their pay packet each month, official presentation slides dating from 2020 gave two examples involving repayments of £15 and £60 a month.

The slides then highlighted “other monthly costs for comparison”, including £10 for clubbing, £17 for “cinema/gigs” and £14 for a mobile phone contract.

In April, after the inquiry was launched, the government said it would cap the plan 2 loan interest rate at 6% from September in response to fears that the Iran war would push up inflation.

A government spokesperson said: “We inherited the current system and have taken steps to make it fairer, including raising the repayment threshold for the first time since 2021 and capping maximum interest rates this year to protect graduates from rising costs.”

They said the government had reintroduced targeted maintenance grants, and added that the system “protects lower-earning graduates”, with repayments linked to income and any outstanding balance and interest written off at the end of the loan term.

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