The reform of university financing & specifically the student loan system will only come when we reject the notion that most (or indeed all) the benefits of attending university are captured by graduates (the business model that sees them pick up the entire headline cost of tuition).

A university educated cohort is a major public good in many ways & so the Govt. *should* take on a significant proportion (if not all) the cost(s)....

#politics #universities

https://www.theguardian.com/money/2026/may/27/tax-on-ambition-graduates-tell-all-to-student-loans-inquiry

‘A tax on ambition’: graduates tell all to student loans inquiry

Treasury select committee hears that interest rate and repayment terms are ‘extortionate’ and ‘not reasonable’

The Guardian

@ChrisMayLA6 Primary & secondary education are almost universally accepted as a common good. They are not just paid out of the public purse for all children as a right, but participation is actively enforced by the courts.

Yet somehow, tertiary eduction is treated by all major political parties as a luxury good, whose consumers must drown in debt until they retire.

If a child learns well, they get praised. But after 18, learning gets an automatic sentence to the Marshalsea. #Dickens needed!

@2legged

I think its all tied up to the pervasive amateurism (and generalist) in our political class - they cannot see how specialists & specialisms are actually useful for society because they are all amateurish generalists

@ChrisMayLA6 Some of thst. But also I think deep fear of an educated populace that can think critically, rather than being Daily Mail fodder. They have a really deep rage at Corbynism, the Greens, SNP, Plaid, critical race theory — all the signs of people who can build a society that rejects their assumptions and rejects being told how to think.

@2legged

yes, that too.... beware the educated voter