UK
Graduation Ceremony
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Graduates who attended
university for free should start paying towards the cost of their degree, a
research paper suggests.
Press
Association report continues:
A
new study calls for the introduction of a new “all-age graduate tax” which is
paid by everyone who has a degree, regardless of when they studied or how much
it cost them.
The
proposal would help to cut the amount that today’s students pay to go to
university and increase funds raised for the public purse, according to the
authors.
The
study comes at a time when tuition fees, which now stand at up to £9,250 a
year, are firmly back in the spotlight, with growing concerns about issues such
as value for money and spiralling pay for university bosses.
Researchers
at the Centre for Research on Learning and Life Chances (LLAKES) at the UCL Institute
of Education set out proposals for a graduate tax, which they suggest are a
mid-point between the current fees and loans system and a general election
pledge by the Labour Party to scrap tuition fees altogether.
Under
the current system, students can get government-backed loans to cover their
tuition and living costs, which they begin paying back once they are earning
over £21,000. Any money not paid back after 30 years is written off.
The
new paper proposes two forms of graduate tax. It makes calculations based on
the tax being paid by English and EU graduates, working in England, aged 20 to
64, who had their degree subsidized by the government, as well as tax
allowances for the 2016/17 financial year.
Under
the first scheme, graduates earning at least £25,000 would pay 2.5% of their
taxable income less personal allowance, while under the second, graduates would
pay 2% of their taxable income in the basic tax rate band, and 3% on anything
over this.
There
would be a tapered increase up to these percentages starting once graduates
were earning over £21,000.
The
paper notes that, under the current system, a recent graduate who paid £9,000 a
year in tuition fees and is now earning £35,000 would have to pay back around
£105 a month.
Under
the two systems proposed by the researchers, the same graduate would pay around
half this amount each month. At the same time, the paper says, more money would
be generated for the Treasury.
Under
the first option, an analysis of official data suggests that £3.58 billion
would be produced annually, and under the second, it would be around £3.7
billion. In comparison, it says, figures show that £1.66 billion was obtained
through student loan repayments in 2015/16.
Paper
author Professor Andy Green said fine details of the scheme would need to be
worked out, for example lower rates for graduates who went to university from
1998 to 2005 and paid around £1,000 a year in fees, or those who went from 2006
to 2012 and paid around £3,000 a year. These former students may already have
paid back their loans.
The
paper says: “It should not be assumed that graduates in older age groups will
automatically resist paying such a tax. Many older graduates will take the
future interests of their own children and grandchildren into consideration
when evaluating the merits of an all-age graduate tax, and others will recognize the social benefits of enhancing equity between different
generations.”
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