Could someone explain how this happens?
It was my general understanding - albeit as an American - that university costs were virtually close to nothing outside of a few exceptions. Have the costs risen that much over the last 15-20 years to create this level of debt?
Most of the Brits I interact with have always pumped up the education system as being so much cheaper than that in US, but there’s a chance that those comprised of mostly older Gen X who graduated 30 years ago without noting recent changes, but this news is very surprising to me. £53K in debt is nearing the same amount that the average millennial had at graduation as well.
fox2263@lemmy.world 1 day ago
I graduated 10 years ago. I now owe more than when I left despite paying it off for 9 of those years.
boonhet@sopuli.xyz 1 day ago
How’s that possible? Genuinely wondering, I’m from a country with free uni which is still cheap ish if you don’t qualify for free for some reason.
fox2263@lemmy.world 21 hours ago
Once upon a time university fees were fairly ok. Most people would leave uni with under 10k of debt and have it paid off within 10 to 15 years or so depending on wage.
Then the liar that is Nick Clegg came along and instead of scrapping fees, tripled them along with his lord boss David Cameron.
And for some reason I decided to go to university that year, 10 years after I should have (I skipped it in favour of a job when I was that age but decided to retrain).
Left with £40k, paid off 2k due to a redundancy grant from my work, and now owe £42k. I don’t see the point of it coming out of my pay packet to be honest.
The university got a load of new buildings though
Nighed@feddit.uk 22 hours ago
Repayments are 9% of your salary above £26k. If that’s less than interest (inflation +3%!) then it goes up.
It gets written off at 50 something (… probably)