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Students loaded with loans are less free to conduct their lives in the way they wish. It's a bad idea

We know very well the negative consequences of a student loan system. Just look at the United States, writes Julien Mercille.

A CONFIDENTIAL REPORT on the funding of Irish higher education has recommended a student loan system.

But this should be opposed, because it will saddle students with much debt. The burden of paying for education should not be put on students’ shoulders and the system should remain publicly funded.

The loans are said to be ‘income-contingent’, meaning that they would have to be paid back once graduates’ income reaches a minimum level. The media keeps repeating that it would make college ‘free at the point of access’.

But this is a disingenuous way to describe it. When you buy a house with a loan (mortgage), nobody declares that you got a house for free. Student loans don’t make education free—all they do is make you pay later, with a hefty interest bill.

Negetive impacts 

We know very well the negative consequences of a student loan system. Just look at the United States, where it’s been catastrophic. (The plan proposed for Ireland is said to be inspired from the Australian system, which is not as bad as the US, but the principles are the same).

Meet Liz Kelley, a 48-year old Missouri high school teacher who now owes the US government $410,000, and counting.

She is part of the 43 million Americans who owe $1.2 trillion in student loan debt. The average undergraduate who borrows leaves college saddled with $30,000 in borrowings. As many as 780,000 of them, or 1.8% of the total, owe $150,000 or more. And 346,000 owe in excess of $200,000.

Half of the sum owed by Kelley is accounted for by accumulated interest. And no, the exorbitant total is not due to loan sharks’ aggressive practices. It is a result of government loans with a number of features to make it cheaper to borrow, such as no repayments while still in school and below-market rates.

With skyrocketing student debt come more defaults. In the US, as many as 31% of student borrowers default on their loans at community colleges, while only 6% default at selective four-year colleges. The difference is mostly due to the fact that the latter students get jobs with larger salaries, making it easier to reimburse loans.

It reveals that if it is mostly those with the highest-paying jobs who manage to pay back, the system is flawed.

And of course, financial institutions and the banking industry love student loans.

They get more customers and play a role in managing the government loan scheme, or their own lending programmes. It’s all very lucrative for them. And there is also a form of social control involved.

Once they graduate, students are loaded with loans, and therefore less free to conduct their lives in the way they wish. They have such large obligations to meet to rid themselves of their debts that changing jobs or taking more time off may not be possible.

The loan system proposed for Ireland should not be surprising to anybody who has followed how the education system has evolved in recent years. The main government strategy to restructure it is outlined in the Hunt report of 2011.

It basically calls for making higher education more entrepreneurial and commercial. The word ‘enterprise’ appears 89 times in the 134-page report.

There’s nothing wrong with some elements of education finding commercial applications, but when the whole strategy revolves around that, there’s a problem.

Treating education more like a business and less like a public good entails cutting public funding. Since 2006, the real value of public expenditure per student in higher education has declined from just over €11,000 to slightly above €8,000.

As a result, there was a lower level of funding in 2013 than a decade previously (figure 1).

julien 1

Also, public funding as a proportion of total education funding has decreased from 78% in 2008 to 68% in 2013 and will drop to 64% by 2016. Conversely, the ‘student contribution’, namely what students have to pay in terms of fees and other expenses, has gone up in a mirror fashion to make up for the drop in public funding (figure 2).

It is projected that by 2016, private student contributions will amount to 19% of total higher education institutions’ income. Some universities now obtain over 50% of their total funding from private sources.

julien 2

Staff numbers in higher education have been cut by 10%, or 2000 individuals (roughly half academic and half administrative) since 2008. But over the same period, student numbers rose by 25,000.

This means bigger classrooms and the staff-student ratio has increased from 1:15.6 to 1: 19.5. We should fight to keep our education system public, affordable and of high quality. Racking up student debt is not the way to do it. The government should get its priorities right and fund education properly.

Julien Mercille is a lecturer at University College Dublin. Twitter: @JulienMercille

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74 Comments
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    Mute Tony Daly
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    Sep 29th 2014, 6:25 PM

    The husband did his very best and ut must have been awful seeing his wife deteriorate but the hosputal unable to cope. Appalling.

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    Mute cosmological
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    Sep 29th 2014, 5:54 PM

    Makes me mad that hospital excellence isn’t the prior government priority.

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    Mute Tony Skillington
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    Sep 29th 2014, 9:31 PM

    The only priority of this government is to try and fool us all in a couple of years and get back into power

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    Mute Joseph O'Regan
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    Sep 29th 2014, 6:13 PM

    The Government is destroying the public health care system or letting it self destruct. They want the health care for profit. The people should be under no illusion that this will mean even less care for more money. Look at what privation has done to the system in the Netherlands. …..it destroyed it, the country went from one of the most humane efficient systems to one where people are paying enormous sums to private companies for the least cover required by law.

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    Mute Colm Byrne
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    Sep 29th 2014, 7:43 PM

    “Dr Peter Boylan says it’s well recognised that Ireland has the lowest number of consultants per head of population in the OECD”. I’d hazard a guess earnings are at the very top levels of the OECD. Pay less, employ more?

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    Mute Colm Byrne
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    Sep 29th 2014, 7:48 PM

    Shock horror. Yup, top 2/3 well paid in the OECD even after recent cuts, and twice the pay of uk equivalents. http://www.irishtimes.com/news/health/irish-hospital-consultants-among-highest-paid-in-the-world-1.1850847

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    Mute Andrew
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    Sep 29th 2014, 8:42 PM

    Hospitals are on five day week. Go in Friday wait till Monday for attention.

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    Mute Sean Macc
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    Sep 29th 2014, 10:56 PM

    Consultant salaries have already been cut drastically. The result? There’s a mass shortage as consultants emigrate to North America and Australia for far better pay and conditions.

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    Mute C Dav
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    Sep 30th 2014, 6:48 AM

    Not a very smart comment about reducing pay when they can’t recruit consultants (or registrars) to work in these jobs in the first place.

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    Mute Tony Daly
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    Sep 29th 2014, 6:04 PM

    If we could only have centres of fully resourced barely adequate competence instead of centres of excellence that would be a good start. Clearly much more could have been done if the resources were there but we have other priorities in Ireland.

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    Mute Sinead Dolan
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    Sep 29th 2014, 10:39 PM

    She died because she was in the wrong place from day one, a regional hospital without the expertise, in form of consultants, to recognise and treat her condition effectively before it became irreversible. Shocking.

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    Mute Daniel Dudek Corrigan
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    Sep 29th 2014, 5:55 PM

    No, it’s a consequence of hundreds of years of religious oppression and lack of a proper, full abortion legislation.

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    Mute Joan Murphy
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    Sep 29th 2014, 7:59 PM

    Daniel with a comment like that you must be trolling

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    Mute Mike O Neill
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    Sep 29th 2014, 8:59 PM

    This tragic case had nothing to do with abortion.

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    Mute Maggie
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    Sep 29th 2014, 9:41 PM

    You knob.wrong case

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    Mute TheLoneHurler
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    Sep 30th 2014, 12:02 AM

    Pro-choice think has reached a new high.

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    Mute Mary Lyons
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    Sep 29th 2014, 7:49 PM

    And around and around and around we go.! We know whats wrong but we do not know how to fix it. And women die and will continue to die,,,,,,

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    Mute Joan Featherstone
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    Sep 29th 2014, 8:24 PM

    And men Mary, lack of resources etc is not gender specific.

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    Mute CMac59
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    Sep 29th 2014, 8:10 PM

    Bad nursing and medical oversight has more to do with it. This new excuse, which may be valid, seems however to be designed to protect the staff on duty in the ward at the time of the lady’s fatal illness and excuse the HSE management.

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    Mute Maggie
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    Sep 29th 2014, 9:40 PM

    That nurse tried her best to say patient needed icu but doctors dont care bout nurses opinions

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    Mute Carina Clarke
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    Sep 29th 2014, 10:50 PM

    Not to worry, thaw case will probably be used as an excuse to move maternity services out of Sligo hospital now to Galway or Derry or the moon.

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    Mute TheLoneHurler
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    Sep 30th 2014, 12:05 AM

    Sad but true Carina.

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    Mute Hairy lemon
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    Sep 30th 2014, 7:21 AM

    I think using this case to make a point for more consultants is insensitive in the extreme. Our doctors are highly trained and should have been able to make the calls here. It shouldn’t have needed a consultant (who decided to go off to a clinic…).

    A better call would be for the consultants to work in line with a 24x7x365 health service rather than suiting themselves to short days, long weekends and private appointments using public infrastructure. The outcome of those changes would not be ‘debatable’.

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    Mute Fintan Doyle
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    Sep 30th 2014, 7:55 AM

    Lemon,
    It’s strange that you think a consultant who is rostered to work in a clinic outside the hospital is in some way ‘suiting himself’

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    Mute significantrisk
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    Sep 30th 2014, 8:32 AM

    There aren’t enough consultants to staff a 24/7 roster.

    There aren’t enough registrars, or SHOs, or interns either for that matter.

    All doctors in ireland work far and away in excess of our contracted hours, in underresourced services stretched too thinly to provide the level of care we would like.

    Nonsense about people suiting themselves (who exactly would have covered that clinic?) is unhelpful, and that antagonistic attitude is a big part of why the shortage of medical manpower exists.

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    Mute tractor1000
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    Sep 29th 2014, 10:14 PM

    Corrigan you dope!

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