Student loans - a lonely debt
Author: Richard Norfolk
Student life is usually gregarious, with plenty of like-minded company to relieve the possible tedium of study. However, when it comes to dealing with debt, each student has to sort out his own salvation. The theory says that after graduation, the students of today will be the high earners of tomorrow. Doubtless in some cases this is correct but……..
The unavoidable expenditure on student loans to cope with day to day living costs, plus the credit card bills and overdrafts which occur when those costs become too great, have a way of accumulating. This results in students leaving university with, on average, debts reaching £10,000 or more. This is the current debt level. Expectations are that this will increase threefold within a very few years.
Unfortunately no-one can bank on a highly paid job to clear their debts immediately on leaving university. Even if such a job is ‘in the offing’ there is likely to be a significant delay before the actual earning power comes to fruition. In the meantime, i.e. when first starting at university, it is necessary to evaluate the costs you will be facing and plan how best to cope with them.
First – the cost of the course itself, that is the tuition fees. Below a certain level of family income there will be nothing to pay; above this level there is a sliding scale. In earlier years the total cost was paid by the government but this had to be altered when increasing numbers attending university pushed the total costs upwards. It was also claimed that increased earnings as a result of gaining a degree would leave ex-students better able to pay their costs during their working years.
Currently there is however a ceiling on payments, which restricts the value of same to 25% of the cost of the course. This is still a significant sum at around £4,000 but thankfully any balance will be paid by the government.
Don’t forget that this cost is purely to pay for your proportion of the course work – day to day living costs have still to be covered. This and any other needs should be discussed with your Local Education Authority as soon as you know what your tuition fees will be.
The LEA will then calculate the value of loans available to you. You then contact the student loans company and arrange for the necessary funds to be paid into your account ready for the start of the new student year. These are unsecured and will be provided at an interest rate which ties in with inflation, and will not be repayable until the end of the tax year after you graduate.
At this point the repayment threshold comes into operation, so that no repayment will be required until your earnings reach the specified level. Even then your repayments will not (under present legislation) exceed the actual amount borrowed, and will be set at a value that is suitable for your earnings level. If you should decide that despite your educational achievements, the life of an impoverished artist (or other poorly paid artisan) would best suit you and your earnings never reach the threshold figure, then, if you reach the age of 65 without starving to death, your debt will be written off!
So much for student loans – what else is available to you? Credit cards are an obvious source of credit (otherwise they would be called by a different name) but they really should be avoided if possible. With no special terms for students in most cases, the interest rates are high and the amount of credit available to students is low. A lot of money can easily be spent paying interest charges whilst having a maximum debit balance, which makes you pay out regularly but allows you to spend nothing.
A bank loan is another possibility but this too is dangerous ground. The possibility of an interest free student overdraft of £2000 is very attractive, but go just over the limit and the rules will be applied rigorously. This means you are likely to be hit by a very high interest rate PLUS charges for an unauthorised overdraft. The whole of any overdraft will have to be paid off as soon as you leave university, otherwise the entire sum will attract interest charges.
You are going to have to exist without real income for quite some time. Arrange your finances to the best of your ability for the avoidance of interest charges and your lifestyle for the avoidance of unnecessary expenditure. It will seem like a long drag but well worth the effort in the long run.
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