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Sutton Trust, 2024
While the tuition fee system has had a large amount of political and media attention in the last two decades, far less attention has been paid to the student maintenance system -- the amount of funding students have access to for day to day living expenses. But for many students, this funding is of more immediate importance, and can have a major…
Descriptors: Student Financial Aid, Costs, Foreign Countries, Student Loan Programs
Rich, Johnny – Higher Education Policy Institute, 2018
The English tuition fee system is designed to be progressive and to ensure that higher education is well funded. As the Government considers how it could be improved, many former detractors are recognising we could do far worse and fear change. This paper proposes a solution comprising three interdependent policy changes without a significant…
Descriptors: Financial Support, Higher Education, Debt (Financial), Labor Market
Hillman, Nick – Higher Education Policy Institute, 2018
HEPI's response to the Review of Post-18 Education and Funding covers the following 10 areas: (1) Part-time learners; (2) Differential fees; (3) Maintenance grants; (4) Mixed funding model; (5) Uses of tuition fees; (6) Misunderstanding among applicants; (7) Outreach versus spending on bursaries; (8) Accounting treatment of student loans; (9)…
Descriptors: Part Time Students, Fees, Grants, Financial Support
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Blackburn, Lucy Hunter – Scottish Educational Review, 2016
Comparisons with other parts of the United Kingdom have played an important role in justifying decisions made in relation to student funding in Scotland since devolution. This article considers first what comparative claims have been made for the content of student funding policy in four areas: fees, debt, total living cost support and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Comparative Analysis, Educational Finance, Educational Equity (Finance)
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Vandenberghe, V.; Debande, O. – Education Economics, 2007
This paper is a numerical exploration of the following. Assume, in the European Union context, that decision-makers want to spend more on higher education via higher tuition fees, but also want payments to be deferred and income-contingent. There are several possible ways to achieve this. First, ask graduates to repay a fixed amount each year if…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Human Capital, Income, Labor Market
Morris, Marian; Rutt, Simon – National Foundation for Educational Research, 2008
This study aimed to identify the pathways, intentions and relevant perceptions of (non-UK) European Union (EU) students entering English higher education. It sought to identify why students wished to obtain an English HE qualification, their attitudes towards the uptake and repayment of tuition fee loans and their future career plans. Drawing on…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Graduation, International Cooperation, Foreign Countries
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Lincoln, I.; Walker, A. – Higher Education Review, 1996
Seven plans for financing higher education's expansion in the United Kingdom are described, analyzed, and compared, particularly as each addresses three issues: student loan program design; tuition; and student loan repayment. Criteria for evaluating the plans include efficiency, equity, and implications for stability of public spending. The…
Descriptors: Budgeting, Change Strategies, Comparative Analysis, Educational Change
Blaug, Mark; Woodhall, Maureen – 1977
Patterns of government subsidies to higher education in five European countries are considered in order to provide a comparative perspective for U.S. policy-makers. Attention is focused on patterns of subsidizing both institutions and students for the five countries: France, West Germany, the Netherlands, Sweden, and the United Kingdom. The…
Descriptors: Access to Education, Budgeting, Comparative Analysis, Federal Aid