
*crosses fingers* Here's hoping...
Yeah, I think this is the root of the problem. A lot of people have taken Blair and co. to task over these new fees, but very few have actually asked why it is that universities are in financial crisis? It wasn't like that 10 years ago, and back then institutions received no payments at all from students. It's a case of New Labour inheriting Old Labour's trick of not doing their sums properly.
by Barbara
I don't get how Blair expects 50% of school leavers to go to uni...no wonder it's going to cost more! grrrr
That's a contentious issue in contemporary British politics.
by Vinnie
Someone remind me. Why are there Scottish MP's in the English parliament anyway.
That depends on the area the graduate works in, and the location as well, for instance, the IT sector is saturated with contractors and other people with far more experience than the graduates. As a result, most of the graduate schemes have closed, and those graduate jobs that are about are offering a pittence, so the graduates would be lucky to get as much as £16k per annum, most of them are £12-14k.
by Sydney
The average starting graduate salary is now £21k.
Graduate Salarys 'Higher than Ever'
by Stoo
(quotes)
The figures that graduates are earning more money than people who didn't attend university are also bogus IMHO. The figures seem to be based on the graduates of 5 or more years ago, and the job market has changed completely since then.
I think the new system is a better one, albeit involving larger sums of money than before. Current fees are based on parental income, but I know plenty of parents who don't pay the fees for their children even though they're supposed to. Now that no money needs to be paid up-front for tuition ones economic state before going to uni shouldn't make any difference to your ability to go and is the responsibility of the student when and if they earn enough to pay it back. Student loans should cover up-front living expenses (whether it actually does or not will depend on where you go to uni). I don't agree with the bursaries and money off tuition which is proposed for less well-off students - it shouldn't be necessary and seems to me to be only a political concession to those who don't like the plans.
by Maffrew
Everyone should have access to free education, up to undergraduate level. Not everybody should go to University, but everybody should have access to it. Just like everybody should have access to free healthcare if they need it, I think free education should be an underlying tenet of building and developing our society.
by Sydney
(quotes)
Graduate Salarys 'Higher than Ever'
Thats where i got my information from. Its a very up to date study.
(Edited by Sydney 29/01/2004 09:22)
Favourably comparing one massively flawed system with another massively flawed system is playing this on Blair's terms; replacing the status quo and imposing top-up fees should be mutually exclusive. The government blaming the rebels for continuing a policy the selfsame government imposed has to be in the running for the all time record for front. Top-up fees were the only solution the government were *willing*, not able, to present, and the rebels should have played Blair at his own game and demanded he abolish up-front payments regardless.
by Demona
(quotes)
I think the new system is a better one, albeit involving larger sums of money than before. Current fees are based on parental income, but I know plenty of parents who don't pay the fees for their children even though they're supposed to. Now that no money needs to be paid up-front for tuition ones economic state before going to uni shouldn't make any difference to your ability to go and is the responsibility of the student when and if they earn enough to pay it back. Student loans should cover up-front living expenses (whether it actually does or not will depend on where you go to uni). I don't agree with the bursaries and money off tuition which is proposed for less well-off students - it shouldn't be necessary and seems to me to be only a political concession to those who don't like the plans.
I don't agree with fee variability - I think it's likely to deprive those universities that need the money most.
I'm not convinced that the proposed tuition fees are going to solve university funding, though, which would seem to make the whole thing a bit pointless. The money won't start to turn up until 2010 and won't represent all that much of a boost to funding. And the universities don't just need this money for teaching. We have a couple of universities who can compete worldwide on research, and it very much in spite of their resources (I believe Harvard spends 2-3 times the combined money spent on research in the whole of the UK). The economic benefit of having a country full of graduates is somewhat lessened by them all buggering off to the US for more money to work on research which will benefit someone else's economy.
by Sydney
(quotes)
Graduate Salarys 'Higher than Ever'
Thats where i got my information from. Its a very up to date study.
Not surprisingly, it seems to be basing it's information on the London area.
The most lucrative destination for graduates is, unsurprisingly, London and the south east.