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Britain: Blair government seeks massive hike in university
tuition fees
By Julie Hyland
13 December 2003
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Prime Minister Tony Blair has delayed until January a parliamentary
vote on the governments plans to raise university tuition
fees. The extra time is to enable ministers to broker an agreement
with the 150 Labour MPs who had threatened to rebel over the measure.
The raising of tuition fees is the centre piece of a package
of right-wing measures making up the governments legislative
programme for the forthcoming year.
Under the proposal, current up-front tuition fees of £1,000
are to be replaced by charges of up to £3,000 a year to
be deducted from graduates salaries. Barclays Bank has estimated
that it will mean students beginning their working career with
debts close to £35,000, combined with student loans and
additional borrowing. However, university vice-chancellors have
already indicated that a £3,000 fee is not high enough,
and some have suggested raising it to £15,000 a year.
MPs had been expected to vote on the plans before the Christmas
holiday, but with a quarter of Labour MPs signing an early -day
motion criticising the proposal, there were concerns that the
vote could be lost.
According to reports, the government is hoping to win opponents
over by raising the salary level at which students must start
repaying their debt from £15,000 to £20,000 a year.
Blair called the bluff of his nominal opponents within the party
when he warned that his authority was on the line and that there
will be absolutely no retreat.
Few if any of the Labour MPs who profess opposition to this
or that piece of legislation have the guts for such a leadership
fight. Former foreign secretary Robin Cook, who resigned from
the cabinet in protest over Iraq, pleaded with Blair not to turn
the issue into a vote on his leadership. Cook, who had previously
described the plans as deeply offensive, said, Any
prime minister is entitled to a vote of confidence but...that
should be assessed on the totality of the record of the government.
Claims that senior cabinet ministers were opposed to the plans
were quickly quashed when both Chancellor Gordon Brown and Home
Secretary David Blunkett denied rumours that they were heading
up an opposition.
Brown backed Blairs insistence that it was essential
for the top-up fees to win parliamentary approval, whilst a spokesman
for Blunkett said suggestions that he was leading a revolt
on this is absolute fiction. The home secretary is fully signed
up to the Governments policy on tuition fees and has publicly
advocated it on numerous occasions.
Tuition fees are entirely associated with the Blair government.
Even the Conservative government of Margaret Thatcher during the
1980s felt it would be political suicide to suggest such a measure,
and an initial plan to replace student grants with loans was delayed
for years due to popular opposition. Labours abandonment
of its social reformist policies in favour of a free market agenda
gave the go-ahead for its abandoning the right to free education.
In 1997, Blairs Labour Party, then in opposition, joined
an all-party review of higher education under Lord Dearing, which
later recommended students contribute to the costs of their education.
Dearings plans were seized upon by the incoming Labour
government. So keen was Blair to prove to his backers in the City
of London that his government would press ahead with the attack
on public services where the Tories had faltered, that it even
ignored Dearings recommendation that maintenance grants
aimed at the poorest students be kept in order to ensure they
were not financially deterred from entering university. Labour
abandoned the grant in favour of student loans and later introduced
a £1,100 annual tuition fee.
At the time, Labour claimed that the measure was necessary
to boost student numbers and enable British universities to compete
for research and intake in a globally competitive marketplacethe
same arguments it is using today to increase fees. And it presented
the measure as socially just, arguing that it was
unfair to expect a cleaner or garbage collector to finance the
education of a student who would one day earn much more than him.
It is not often that Blair shows any concern for the fate of
the low-paid, given that his government has presided over a record
increase in social inequality that has left the poorest families
carrying the burden of cuts in welfare spending and indirect tax
hikes. But the government considers such rhetoric politically
useful in justifying its attacks on higher education. Blair has
once again taken to feigning sympathy with his mythical cleaner,
whilst Labours Barry Sheerman, chair of the education select
committee, went further, denouncing students protesting the measure
as selfish, greedy and cynical.
Labours propaganda in favour of the measure is a tissue
of lies. In the first place, its argument that cleaners and other
low-paid workers have no interest in ensuring there is a plentiful
supply of teachers, doctors, lawyers, etc., is a modern variant
of Thatchers claim that there is no such thing as
society.
The political rationale is the same one that has been used
to justify the privatisation of other essential services such
as health care. By arguing that only those who directly benefit
from a service should pay for it, successive governments have
run down public services and enabled a bonanza for private corporations.
The next logical step is to insist that those without children,
or whose children are privately educated, should not have to contribute
to public education at all. This measure is not so far away and
is implicit in proposals by the Conservatives to initiate a voucher
system for education.
It is also a red herring. Blair presents the issue as a choice
between the low-paid financing higher education, and the students
themselves, in order to detract from the real issuethat
the cost of ensuring higher education should be borne by big business.
The turn towards student fees has been made to enable the government
to cut public funding for higher educationby more than half
per student in the past 10 yearsas part of its agenda to
cut taxes on the major corporations and the rich. Some 37 percent
of UK university funding now comes from private sourcescompared
to an average of 21 percent in the industrialised countriesa
significant proportion of which is from students.
Far from being a more egalitarian approach towards the cost
of higher education, it is the poorer students who are especially
penalised by the measure. Just 18 percent of students have parents
employed in manual, semi-skilled and unskilled jobs despite making
up 40 percent of the population. And according to recent research
by the Department for Education and Skills, poorer students are
especially affected by the introduction of fees, ending their
education with almost 50 percent more debts than their richer
counterparts who are often given money by their parents. Overall
students outgoings are now double their income, despite
60 percent of them holding down part-time jobs.
The fate of what is habitually defined as middle class
students is not much better. Changes in employment that have downgraded
the status and pay of many of the old white-collar professions
have rendered this term almost meaningless. Nonetheless, the government
routinely employs the term to bolster its claims that because
the average university leaver can earn £220,000 more than
non-graduates over his or her working life, free university education
amounts to a form of middle class welfare.
But the figures cited relate to those taking private-sector
employment in the fields of law and science. Research shows that
many students hoping to enter what has traditionally been regarded
as middle class employmentsuch as teachingactually
lose out by going on to higher education. According to a study
by researchers at Warwick University, students graduating in courses
such as language, history, art and English can expect to earn
between 2 percent and 10 percent less than someone who left education
at 18.
Declining earning potential, again accounted for by government
cuts in the public sector, is largely responsible for the fact
that the number of teachers entering the profession is decliningtheir
places often being taken by less skilled education assistants.
University lecturers pay, for example, has fallen 40 percent
in real terms over the last 20 years.
A vicious circle is thereby being created whereby the least
advantaged children are taught in schools with barely adequate
facilities or staffing levels, further compromising their own
chances of going on to higher education. Government proposals
will only compound this social inequality by reinforcing the divide
between the elite universities, such as Oxford and Cambridge,
and the so-called second tier.
Members of the wealthier Russell Group of universities already
attract the lions share of government grants and contracts
in research and development, bolstering their position in the
top league. Cambridge and Oxford get £60.9 million and £61
million, respectively, compared to just £76,186 for Luton
University, for example.
These universities have indicated they intend to introduce
a market rate for tuition fees, further ensuring their
status as the preserve of the rich. The think tank Catalyst has
said that the introduction of variable fees would mean fewer working-class
students could afford the higher-cost, more prestigious courses,
and would lead to them opting for shorter, job-related degrees
instead.
See Also:
Britain: Queens speech
outlines attack on students, immigrants and civil liberties
[28 November 2003]
Britain: Labour government
moves to market based higher education
[12 February 2003]
Oxbridgethe British
Establishments essential club
[12 September 2001]
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