@NigellaWannabe1 I’m afraid you don’t seem to entirely understand how the loans work. What you pay depends on what you earn. As a result some will pay it off but they still think 25% won’t over 40 years. These are people in lower paid jobs. They will pay for longer and the interest racks up. It seems they might be better off paying up front. However you have £9,500 a year for tuition and a minimum of £5,000 for maintenance. Some will have £10,500 for maintenance each year and in London, more. This means poorer families whose dc can get the full loans will have to find £20,000 pa. Do you think they have £60,000 lying around?
If you do have £60,000 available, you have to look at what else dc could get for the money. A house deposit almost certainly. Then you have to consider repayments of the loan. Even if you borrow only £30,000, your repayments are the same as £60,000 because it’s based on earnings. Not size of loan. Sk you can put money in for no monthly gain as the repayments are identical irrespective of what you borrow. This does not seem to be understood.
Quite clearly, if you have substantial savings for dc and they will get a house deposit and university paid for, crack on. The majority don’t have this for several dc, so the loan is inevitable.
Higher earning dc pay it off quicker, so make sure the degree leads to good money. Or don’t go at all.
The “debt” is not a debt in the conventional sense as you are not required to pay it off and many grads starting out pay little each month. MSE has the payments tables. However with 37% of school leavers going to university, it’s inevitable they pay and it’s not on general taxation. However the student debt is fast reaching £250 billion and this money has gone to the universities. There is no way grads will get free tuition again if we want a HE sector of this size. If we close half our universities, it might be possible. Does anyone want that? Only AAA students go?
ML is not wrong but if you have lots of money - pay up front. If you don’t, then it has to be the loan. Most grads don’t notice how much they pay. Grads do still earn more so “debt” at this minor level isn’t a burden. Some people need to read up on repayment figures and how the loans work. If you have only £60,000 for dc think very hard about uni fees or house. If might take dc 20 years to save that much again.