she would be gone before the next GE.
There is nothing to stop the tories nicking labour's idea how to do all of this.
1. tuition fee: we know that a lot of students can't and won't pay it back, we simply re-nationalise the student loan company
2. re-nationalise water, power, post office and rail: the way Labour will do this is intelligent, these companies will issue government backed bonds at fixed interest, pensioners and insurance companies will queue up to buy them. I'll buy some of those bonds myself.
None of this can be done without getting out of the EU.
You can say it as many times as you like... you're just wrong.
It can be done within the EU.
and regarding the Student Loans.
You need to adjust your thinking...
A quick note on why the amount of student loan debt is mostly irrelevant - that EVERYONE should read - please share.
Scenario 1: Student debt £20,000. Your earnings £31,000. As you repay 9% of everything above £21,000 your annual repayment is £900.
Scenario 2: Student debt £50,000. Your earnings £31,000. As you repay 9% of everything above £21,000 your annual repayment is £900.
Scenario 3: Student debt £1 billion. Your earnings £31,000. As you repay 9% of everything above £21,000 your annual repayment is £900.
Repayments stop after 30 years regardless. So the only difference the amount you borrow makes is whether you will clear the debt within those 30 years. All but the very highest earners won't - so unless you're on a big salary the amount you borrow is irrelevant.
Similar is true for the interest - if you won't clear what you borrow (plus interest) within the 30 years, the rate is often irrelevant.
This isn't saying things are cheap or even fair, just that it doesn't work the way most assume. Many should ignore the amount borrowed and interest added and just see this as a 9% higher tax rate above £21,000 that's paid for 30 years.
This is why I believe 'student loans' is a misnomer - elsewhere similar schemes are called a 'graduate contribution' system. We should too.
It'd stop people being scared off uni for the wrong reasons and it'd stop forcing our young people to get a 'loan' that then makes them more likely to get other worse types of loan.
PLEASE SHARE.
(This is based on Eng Uni starters after 2012 - for earlier cohorts and other UK nations it differs. Full info via my 20 student loan mythbusters guide
http://www.moneysavingexpert.com/…/student-loans-tuition-fe…)