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Middle-income parents will have to pay more for their children’s university education after the Government miscalculated the number of students eligible for grants. It has reneged on some of its funding commitments after admitting that it had underestimated the number of people entitled to a full student maintenance grant this year by almost 10 per cent.
It has now reduced the income threshold for the means-tested maintenance grant by 17 per cent to £50,020. Families earning below £25,000 will still get the full grant of £2,835. But about 40,000 prospective students – 10 per cent of next year’s intake – are expected to lose out.
A full or partial grant, which covers living costs but not fees, was made available to all students whose parents earned up to £60,000, for the first time this year. Previously the cap was £39,305. The reforms, brought in during the first days of Gordon Brown’s premiership, were designed to attract more working-class students into higher education. A third of students were expected to be eligible for a full grant.
Admitting the £200 million funding gap, John Denham, the Universities Secretary, said: “It is obviously an adjustment compared with what is in place for students who went to college or university this year. We have done it to get the right balance between my decision to spend more on student finance, because of the number of low-income students in the system, and the need to make some changes to the student finance system so that the system comes into equilibrium.”
The number of extra student places will also be reduced from 15,000 to 10,000 next year to help to plug the funding gap. It makes the Government’s aspiration for 50 per cent of all young people to enter higher education by 2010 impossible to fulfil.
Student unions and opposition parties accused the Department for Innovation, Universities and Skills of incompetence and of playing fast and loose with students’ futures as the country enters a recession.
Malcolm Keight, head of higher education at the University and College Union, said that the Government’s lack of strategy for student funding threatened to “throw the whole system into chaos”.
David Willetts, the Shadow Universities Secretary, said that the announcement was embarrassing for Mr Brown. “His own policy is unravelling,” he said. “It shows that they have been completely taken by surprise and the figures they based their estimates on last year didn’t add up.”
Wes Streeting, president of the National Union of Students, said that the Government needed to “stop tinkering with grants and fees every year, and recognise that the entire higher education funding system is unsustainable. We need a proper review of the system so that parents and students know where they stand.”
Martin Freedman, head of pay, conditions and pensions at the Association of Teachers and Lecturers, said: “Although this is supposed to affect so-called middle-income families, the reduced family-income threshold means students will be hit if they have two parents who earn no more than an average salary.”
Bahram Bekhradnia, director of the Higher Education Policy Institute, said that the reduction in the number of student places came as the population of 18-year-olds was about to rise in the next two years.
Help while studying
— Students who entered higher education after 2005 can apply for either a maintenance or special support grant of up to £2,835 if their family income is less than £50,020 (down from £60,000)
— A maintenance grant is paid in place of a student loan for maintenance. A special support grant is paid on top of the loan
— Those who qualify for a special support grant include single parents or two parents who are students, disabled people and students aged 60 and above
— All eligible, full-time students in higher education can take out a student loan for tuition fees of up to £3,145 for this academic year
— Depending on income, students can also take out a student loan for maintenance of up £6,475
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Outstanding example of world class performance again by the UK Government.
Dave, Chorley,
Just how many instances of incompetence can a government have. Is there any area of this Labour government that is actually fit for purpose?
James, Hull, uk
There aren't enough graduate jobs. Everyone has a degree now. The only people who get graduate jobs are those who can afford to do extra years doing unpaid work experience or postgraduate study. The rest will be working in a supermarket telling anyone who will listen that they have a degree...
Amy Davies, Richmond, England
Is this applicable only in England or is it the case in Wales and Scotland too? Unfortunately in the post-devolution age most London papers fail to correctly report England-only stories as being so, thereby confusing us. Perhaps they're scared that we'll stop buying their papers?
Paul M Roberts , City of Newport, Wales
Anyone of 18 or over is considered to be an adult - has 'come of age' and is legally independant. The wealth or otherwise of the family is therefore irrelevant to the issue. Why the principle of parental income affecting funding for students is not challenged is a mystery.
Anthony Pierce, Deal, Kent