Ignition
Julian Astle asks whether free tuition fees is the best way to encourage access and improve the quality of higher education.
Now that the Conservatives have abandoned their opposition to tuition fees, the Liberal Democrats stand alone in promising to fund higher education exclusively from the public purse. The policy reflects the party’s commitment to expanding educational opportunities for all, and its fear that charges will harm access.
But is this concern well founded?
The evidence, from those countries where fees were introduced earlier than in the UK, suggests not. Australia, New Zealand and the United States, each of which charges significantly more for higher education than the UK, have higher overall participation rates, and, more tellingly, higher participation rates among low income groups.
There
are several reasons for this. First, fees are not paid by poor
students. They are paid by students from more affluent families and
then recycled in the form of scholarships and bursaries for those from
less advantaged backgrounds. With the new system of variable fees
coming into place later this year, we are already seeing this theory
turn into reality. More than £300 million of the additional £900
million that variable fees will bring into the system is already
earmarked for student support – four times more than is required by
law.
Second, going to university still pays in
the long run. £9,000 may sound like a lot of money for a three year
course, but it is still dwarfed by the hundreds of thousands of pounds
in increased earnings that a degree bestows on a typical graduate over
the course of his working life. Until such a time as the costs of going
to university outweigh the financial benefits, enrolments are unlikely
to fall. With the graduate job market buoyant and graduate salaries
still rising, it seems we are still some way short of that point in the
UK.
Third, because tuition fees are covered by
heavily subsidised, income contingent loans, an investment in higher
education is not only highly profitable, it is also virtually risk
free. Student loans carry a 0 per cent interest rate and repayments
are linked to earnings. This means that those with no, or very low,
incomes pay nothing, while everyone else pays only 9 per cent of
earnings above the £15,000 threshold each month, much like income tax.
Finally,
and most importantly, fees are unlikely to restrict access to higher
education because cost is not what is keeping the majority of bright
but poor children out of the system. The real reason why disadvantaged
children are not going to university in far greater numbers is because
they are much less likely than more privileged children to get the exam
results needed to apply. This has little or nothing to do with
ability. Recent research has shown that in the UK today, a clever
child from a poor home will be overtaken by less bright children from
well-off homes by the age of six. It is this, rather than the
introduction of tuition fees, that represents the real barrier to
participation in higher education.
That is why,
if the expansion of ‘life chances’ is the priority, the more radical
approach would be to shift the balance of public spending away from the
higher education system and towards the under fives instead. One way
of initiating this shift, would be to replace the blanket interest
subsidy on student loans with a subsidy targeted only on graduates with
low incomes, and to spend the £1.5 billion plus annual saving on
pre-school provision instead. For it is in the early years, rather than
at the age of 18, that the battle for social justice and social
mobility will ultimately be won or lost.
This piece first appeared in The Guardian - 9th May 2006