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Norton, Andrew – Melbourne Centre for the Study of Higher Education, 2022
This paper summarises the evolution of student contributions in Australia since 1989, exploring system redesigns that commenced in 1997, 2005 and 2021. Public and private benefits are recurring themes in setting student contributions, both as high-level justifications for government policy and in pricing specific disciplines. Professor Andrew…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Costs, Incentives, Public Policy
National Association of Student Financial Aid Administrators, 2014
There is remarkable diversity in student loan systems throughout the world. In considering the ideal approach to system of loan repayment based on income here in the United States, it is valuable to examine the nature, successes, and failures of some other countries' methods of offering borrowers income-contingent student loan repayment. Two…
Descriptors: Student Loan Programs, Loan Repayment, Income Contingent Loans, Higher Education
Asher, Lauren; Cheng, Diane; Thompson, Jessica – Institute for College Access & Success, 2014
This white paper analyzes the potential effects of requiring income-driven repayment for all federal loans as well as relying on paycheck withholding for loan payments, with particular attention to the implications for low-income students and families. The Institute for College Access & Success (TICAS) also examines the relevance and evolution…
Descriptors: Income Contingent Loans, Student Loan Programs, Loan Repayment, Finance Reform
Birch, Elisa Rose; Miller, Paul W. – Australian Universities' Review, 2008
The Higher Education Contribution Scheme (HECS) has been advanced as having many desirable properties. These have been discussed largely from the theoretical perspective, and with the individual rather than the family as the reference point. This paper explores whether HECS is working the way it was intended. Is it having undesirable or…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Academic Achievement, Loan Repayment
Amatya, Sachi – ProQuest LLC, 2009
The increasing cost of higher education, coupled with the inability of federal and state governments to sustain parallel increases in levels of funding for student financial aid, has led to significant growth of student loans. This project analyzes the multidimensional student loans space in the US. This project also compares and contrasts some of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Student Financial Aid, Higher Education, Student Loan Programs
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Stokes, Anthony; Wright, Sarah – Contemporary Issues in Education Research, 2010
In a period of student loan scandals and U.S. financial market instability impacting on the cost and availability of student loans, this paper looks at alternative models of higher education funding. In this context, it also considers the level of financial support that the government should provide to higher education.
Descriptors: Student Financial Aid, Student Loan Programs, Paying for College, College Students
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Harding, Ann – Education Economics, 1995
Outlines design issues involved with introducing an income-contingent, college student-loan program and describes the solutions adopted by Australian and New Zealand governments. Uses dynamic microsimulation to simulate the likely future repayment profiles for two Australian ICL schemes and assesses the proportion of total debt repaid. (19…
Descriptors: Educational Finance, Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Loan Repayment
West, Edwin G. – 1993
The Ontario Student Loan Program has experienced problems with default on student loans, as have loan systems in other countries where governments rely mainly on banks and special departments of quasi-public institutions to monitor or police the borrowers. This report discusses the need for radical modifications of the student loan program to…
Descriptors: Finance Reform, Financial Exigency, Foreign Countries, Higher Education
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Chapman, Bruce – Australian Universities' Review, 1996
The new Australian Higher Education Contribution Scheme allows students to either pay a standard tuition charge on enrollment or defer payment until they are earning at least the current average taxable income. At that point, they incur a debt to the government for the amount deferred and repayment rate is based on income. Conceptual bases and…
Descriptors: Educational Economics, Educational Finance, Educational Policy, Federal Aid