色盒直播

Danny Dorling on 拢6K fees: the 1% won鈥檛 feel a thing

Labour鈥檚 proposal to cut tuition fees will be funded by removing a perk from the UK鈥檚 super-rich, writes the professor of geography

Published on
March 5, 2015
Last updated
June 10, 2015

Cutting a few of the perks of the very richest UK pensioners can allow tuition fees to be cut by a third, and universities not lose out

Not long after 拢9,000 a year tuition fees were introduced in the 2012 鈥渞eforms鈥, a myth was born: the bottom 30 per cent of graduates were better off so the reforms were progressive. However, a reform is not progressive if it takes slightly less from those who end up with least and could never pay back their loan. It is also not a 鈥渞eform鈥 to privatise higher education. Individualised tuition fees were an error. They need to be reduced to zero, as in Germany. Labour鈥檚 proposal to reduce the maximum to 拢6,000 takes us a third of the way there.

A progressive reform of higher education tuition funding does not stack yet more debt on to yet more young people, but uses general taxation to fund the collective good. About 30 per cent of all income tax is paid out of the pockets of the best-paid 1 per cent. Getting them to pay for the social infrastructure of the country they profit from being in would be a progressive reform. In its new proposals, Labour targets the pension tax relief of the 1 per cent to fund the costs of dropping fees to 拢6,000.

The 1 per cent react predictably. Writing in The Sunday Times, Camilla Cavendish begins her attack on Labour with the words, 鈥淎s a parent whose eldest son has just turned 13, with two more coming up behind him鈥︹, as if she is somehow typical of all those concerned parents across England who might welcome the cut in their children鈥檚 student debts. But then Ms Cavendish rubbishes the proposals. Nowhere does she mention her financial position, or that of her husband, Huw van Steenis, head of the Europe, Middle East and Africa banking and diversified financials teams at investment bank Morgan Stanley.

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People in such a position find it convenient not to be paying for the higher education of children from poorer families through their taxes. They are part of a small group who can easily afford to pay their children鈥檚 fees up front should they wish. Paying university tuition fees is not an issue for the rich, being much less than school fees and often paid in the same way, without loans or interest.

English society is divided into the haves, might-haves and have-nots. The might-haves read The Sunday Times where they are told what is in their interest by the haves. They are never told that the Million+ group of universities, which educate more than 2 million students a year, wholeheartedly accept Labour鈥檚 proposals, described as 鈥渧ery welcome鈥 by Michael Gunn, the group鈥檚 chair and vice-chancellor of Staffordshire University.

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And who would lose out? The Institute for Fiscal Studies calculates that if Labour鈥檚 proposals were implemented then the tiny proportion of the population paid more than 拢150,000 a year, just over 1 per cent of all adults, would receive tax relief of only 20 per cent on their pension savings and they would be eligible for full tax relief on pension contributions of only 拢30,000 a year instead of the current 拢40,000. Cutting a few of the perks of the very richest UK pensioners can allow tuition fees to be cut by a third, and universities not lose out.

Keith Burnett, vice-chancellor of the University of Sheffield, and Yael Shafritz, president of Sheffield Students鈥 Union, issued a joint statement last week which concluded: 鈥淲e believe that the future of society depends on effective publicly funded education at all levels, including higher education, and that this should be funded by the nation.鈥 Sir Keith added: 鈥淚 would personally welcome a reduction in fees but only if there is a cast-iron guarantee of long-term pound for pound replacement funding 鈥 without it, universities simply won鈥檛 be able to give students and the country what they need鈥ur current system is under duress by both an unsustainable loans system and off-putting measures for international students who are so vital to our capital investments and facilities鈥e need a long-term credible alternative based on a proper covenant between universities and wider society.鈥

We are at a turning point. One way leads to further privatisation, ever-higher fees, unsustainable loans and a country again dominated by aristocratic families (the new 1 per cent). The other path is to something actually progressive, a new covenant. The first step is to cut fees to 拢6,000.

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Reader's comments (1)

Why does the 色盒直播 continue to publish this nakedly partisan agitprop from Dorling. Rather than address Camilla Cavendish's arguments he has to imply that she cannot be worth listening to since her husband is a senior banker. Shame on you!

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