Mainly for those
interested in the forthcoming UK general election
I do not remember much from my university days, but I remember
one meeting where the subject was student finance. This was a time of student
grants rather than loans, and the proposal being debated was to replace grants
with some kind of loan or tax. Speaker after speaker went through how student
grants amounted to a payment from those not attending university to those that
did, while those that did benefited from the return on the ‘human capital’ a
university education gave them. The logic on equity grounds for switching to
loans seemed compelling. Then someone stood up, and talked of his background
from a mining family in Wales, how he was the first of his family ever to go to
university, and how this would never have happened if they had not had access to
a grant. Those arguing for loans fell silent, and their proposal was lost.
Can the same logic be applied to Ed Miliband’s proposal to reduce the
maximum tuition fee from £9,000 to £6,000? It is a very different starting point, as most UK
students now pay this fee from a loan rather than a grant, but the
distributional consequences are essentially the same. In the UK graduates only
have to start repaying their loans once their income exceeds a threshold, and
many will not pay some or all of it back as a result. Reducing the loan
therefore mainly benefits those students towards the top of the income
distribution. Labour’s proposal has mitigated that effect slightly by
increasing the interest rate that high earners pay, but the IFS say
that “mid-to-high-income graduates are the primary beneficiaries of this
reform, with the very highest earners benefiting the most, despite the rise in
interest rates that they would face.” The fact that the policy is being funded
by cuts in pension relief which will hit similar groups is not really relevant,
because that money could have been used for something else.
So why are Labour proposing to increase inequality in this way?
Is it because they hope that lower fees will encourage those from poor
backgrounds to go to university? One of the remarkable features of the
Coalition’s decision to increase fees is that it does not seem to have reduced
the numbers becoming full time students coming from such backgrounds, although the numbers are still very low. Of course we
cannot be certain what might have happened to these numbers without the fee
increase. It is also important to note that applications for part-time enrolment
have fallen back as a result of higher fees.
However I doubt very much if encouraging the poor to go to
university is what lies behind this policy announcement. Labour are slowly but
steadily losing this election. Every time I look at the predictions for the
number of seats, it seems as if Labour has dropped one or two at the expense of
the Conservatives. Putting luck to one side, there seem no obvious events
between now and May that will change this trend, while George Osborne has a
budget that will be sure to include plenty of pre-election
bribes to carefully selected groups, to add to the many already announced.
Perhaps Labour’s only hope is that they can galvanise those who
traditionally do not vote: the young. The old are much more likely to vote than
the young. In 2010 just over 50% of the 18-24 age group voted, but nearly 75%
of those 65 or over voted. And the young vote left.
The chart below shows the ‘age gap’ by party, where the age gap
is the percentage of the 18-24 age group who voted for a party, less the same
percentage for the 65+ age group. The data for ‘now’ is taken from this Populus poll (Table 3). The age gap for
the Conservatives has been steadily increasing over time. The LibDems benefited
hugely from young voters in 2005 and 2010, but perhaps partly as a result of their change in policy on
tuition fees that gap has completely disappeared. The youth vote has gone back
to Labour as never before, but it is vulnerable on two counts. First there are
the Greens. In this Populus poll 16% of the 18-24 group said they would vote
Green (compared to just 2% of the 65+ group), but in this YouGov poll they were on level pegging
with Labour. This volatility suggests there is all to play for. (Only 5% of the 18-24 group intended to vote for UKIP, compared to 17% for the over 65s.) Second, there
is the question of how much this group will vote.
UK voting age gap between young and old. Source (actual elections): IPSOS Mori |
Labour therefore need to galvanise the youth vote, and to do
this it needs a cause. The collapse in the LibDem vote among the young suggests
tuition fees could be a potent force, whatever the actual distributional
consequences of the policy are. This against a background where young people
are finding it more and more difficult to buy a house, and the distribution of
income and wealth is moving in favour of the old. This is an
election more than ever before about a clash of interests between the old and
the young. The Conservatives have already given their fair quota of bribes to the old, so it really
was a no brainer that Labour would do the same to the group that could just
save this election for them.