• Visitors can check out the Forum FAQ by clicking this link. You have to register before you can post: click the REGISTER link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. View our Forum Privacy Policy.
  • Want to receive the latest contracting news and advice straight to your inbox? Sign up to the ContractorUK newsletter here. Every sign up will also be entered into a draw to WIN £100 Amazon vouchers!

New students 'face £23,000 debt'

Collapse
X
  •  
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

    #21
    Originally posted by The Lone Gunman View Post
    Not looking for an us and them answer, just a sensible answer. Yours go some way to explaining it.
    I do not begrudge the Scots their free education, I am more interested into why we can not do the same in England.
    There must be some sort of reduction in service elsewhere in Scotland though to pay for it. Either that or the English are paying over the odds for non required services.

    You must be joking !!!

    Comment


      #22
      Originally posted by AlfredJPruffock View Post
      I dont think you are wrong - if you are from Scotland but have been abroad for more than three years then you are no longer 'resident' in the eyes of the Educational Grant folks - so it is a question of residency rather than nationality.
      So if you stay for 3 years in scottland you can get free education
      is it that simple ?

      Comment


        #23
        OK, I'll do my reaction-to-Cyberman-on-Barnett just one more time:

        You go to the office every day. You work all day. You eat lunch in the canteen. You hand over cash to pay for your lunch. No other visible transfer of wealth takes place at the office. Conclusion: you are subsidising the client.

        It's a bit like that: the Barett Formula is one little bit of the large flow of money around the economy. If you look only as far as your nose, it may be the only flow that you see between the UK and Scotland. But that's as perspicacious as missing the fact that you get paid for working in the office, quite a lot more than you pay for your lunch.

        When you count the Barnett Formula, please also count the flow of taxes from Scotland to the exchequer. One calculation put the estimated payments of VAT per head for Scotland as being more than that for England, by an amount that covered the Barnett amount on its own. That's just VAT. Of course it is estimated, HMG will not publish it.

        That's just VAT. National Insurance contributions likewise, Scotland pays more per head than England. As for alcohol duty, petroleum duty, etc.....

        and some more subtle support. What about the nuclear power stations in the south of Scotland? Totally unnecessary fr Scotland, needed for England's consumers. But the cost of building them, not to nention decommissioning them falls on the electricity consumers of the region they are in. Barnett? Don't make me laugh. this is exploitation.

        I hadn't meant to go this far when I started, but alas there is much more to be said.

        Comment


          #24
          Originally posted by Andy2 View Post
          So if you stay for 3 years in scottland you can get free education
          is it that simple ?

          I looked into this some years back - unsure if they have since changed the goalposts - but the residency crtieria was certainly the case then as I realised I would not receive 'free' education as I had been working abroad for a few years- and I am from Scotland.

          Comment


            #25
            Originally posted by The Lone Gunman View Post
            Not looking for an us and them answer, just a sensible answer. Yours go some way to explaining it.
            I do not begrudge the Scots their free education, I am more interested into why we can not do the same in England.
            There must be some sort of reduction in service elsewhere in Scotland though to pay for it. Either that or the English are paying over the odds for non required services.
            Well, as I say it's not a simple "let's cut council spending and we can do free uni", it's a whole parliamentary budget, reflecting one hopes the wishes and priorities of the people. I don't know why England does not do it, or where England spends the money instead (if I may put the question that way round?).

            BTW the Barnett Formula is a Red Herring that Cyberman likes to wave around from time to time. Essentially it exists because some powers, and therefore expenditure, are devolved to Scotland, but the raising of the tax that pays for them remains with Westminster. Before devolution, Westminster taxed and Westminster spent. Now Westminster taxes and Holyrood spends. Therefore Westminster has to give to Holyrood the money that it formerly spent, but now does not itself spend.

            It is not a subsidy, it is a movement of funds from taxation to expenditure, become more visible now that they are not done from the same place. Which itself is an anomaly, fixable by independence.
            Last edited by expat; 18 August 2009, 14:28.

            Comment


              #26
              Originally posted by expat View Post
              Oh rubbish: most of London's salaries come from wealth generated in the rest of Great Britain. It's just administered in London, but it's meaningless to say that London subsidises the rest of the UK: without this rest of the UK, there wouldn't be much in London. Britain's wealth subsidises London.
              Not to knock the rest of the UK but what wealth does the rest of the UK really generate anymore?

              Until the late 70's/ early 80's I would fully agree with you, the south lived high off the sweat of the North but these days? This country butchered it's resource industry, it's manufacturing industries and it's farming industries all which were based up north, now it's all about services and financials (or as I call them, "making money out of nothing industries"), which are all based in the south

              The north is subsidises nothing anymore

              Comment


                #27
                The calculation for this is actually wrong.

                It's not just £23k in debt, but it's also 3-4 years of potential lost earnings and opportunity/investment/foot on ladder in property lost etc..

                For me I don't think Uni is a worthwhile investment any more.. I think there are far better 'alternatives' for your education/training than a degree.
                The cycle of life: born > learn > work > learn > dead.

                Comment


                  #28
                  Originally posted by expat View Post
                  the Barnett Formula exists because some powers, and therefore expenditure, are devolved to Scotland, but the raising of the tax that pays for them remains with Westminster. Therefore Westminster has to give to Holyrood the money. It is not a subsidy, it is a movement of funds from taxation to expenditure
                  Thank you for that explanation.

                  I too had been led to believe England 'subsidised' Scotland through this process.
                  My all-time favourite Dilbert cartoon, this is: BTW, a Dumpster is a brand of skip, I think.

                  Comment


                    #29
                    Originally posted by chris79 View Post
                    The calculation for this is actually wrong.

                    It's not just £23k in debt, but it's also 3-4 years of potential lost earnings and opportunity/investment/foot on ladder in property lost etc..

                    For me I don't think Uni is a worthwhile investment any more.. I think there are far better 'alternatives' for your education/training than a degree.
                    I tend to agree, but if you want to be a nurse or a teacher (or any number of other professions) then you have to go.

                    If you're just going "to get your degree" I don't think it makes financial sense.
                    ‎"See, you think I give a tulip. Wrong. In fact, while you talk, I'm thinking; How can I give less of a tulip? That's why I look interested."

                    Comment


                      #30
                      Originally posted by Not So Wise View Post
                      The north is subsidises nothing anymore
                      I assume these figures are helpful.

                      2.1 Supply and Use Tables for the United Kingdom, 2007

                      Domestic output of products at basic prices in £m:

                      Finance & business services ... 689,524
                      Manufacturing ................. 418,504
                      Distribution & hotels ......... 362,203
                      Education, health & social work 272,041
                      Construction .................. 211,019
                      Transport & communication ..... 190,020
                      Public administration & defence 131,498
                      Other services ................ 103,688
                      Electricity, gas & water supply 069,615
                      Mining & quarrying ............ 043,826
                      Agriculture, forestry & fishing 020,694
                      My all-time favourite Dilbert cartoon, this is: BTW, a Dumpster is a brand of skip, I think.

                      Comment

                      Working...
                      X