STUDENT
LOANS
Personal Finance. Student Loans Debts Do Not
Go On Your Credit
Record.
Every time you apply for
credit, for example a credit card or a loan, the lender will
request to see your credit history from a credit reference
agency. The information they hold is so detailed that there's
really no need for us to fill out that long application form,
because within a fraction of a second they can see all they
need to know from Experian, Equifax or Callcredit, the three
main credit reference agencies. You would be very surprised to
see just how much they know about you.
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Banks, building societies and
other financial institutions providing credit have been passing
on details of your financial transactions to the credit
agencies. Every time you apply for a credit card, every time
you miss a mortgage repayment – it gets noted. They know
whether you pay the minimum or the balance each month, they
even know details of your credit limit on each credit card.
They also look to public records, the voters' roll and the
public register of court actions because that is where all
county court judgements are listed. It all happens
automatically, and when your credit history is requested, the
computer will provide a statistical analysis of your financial
habits and provide an assessment of your suitability. It
enables, the industry argues, lenders to make an accurate
judgement about whether they should lend you money or
not.
However, there is one piece of
financial information that the credit agencies are not allowed
to access, and that's the student loans. Despite the industry's
remonstrations to the government, nothing has changed, and they
are not allowed to access the information. The reason? Student
loans constitute a debt to the taxpayer, they were not funded
by commercial business.
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Before September 1998, the
student loan system worked like this: once graduates were
working and earning the national average, which was £15,000 at
the time, they had to repay their loan on a monthly basis by
direct debit. 59,000 of those pre-1998 graduates still haven't
started repaying their loan, and each has on average a debt of
£2,750.
In September 1998, the student
loan system changed, and the system remains the same to this
day. Now, repayments are taken directly at source, straight
from the salary in the same way as national insurance and
income tax. This method has been a lot more
successful.
The lending industry is not
happy about the student loan situation, their main argument
being that they need to know, when considering an application
for credit, if the applicant has extra financial
responsibilities. The introduction of top-up fees resulted in
increasingly large student debts, and as the post-1998 loans
have to be paid off at a rate of 9% of the graduate's income
once it has reached £15,000, it is a large portion of income to
lose.
The Association Consumer
Credit Counselling Service made the following statement:
“Knowing whether a young person has a student loan and whether
it is being paid back, is useful.” So they are in agreement
with the lenders.
The Citizens Advice Bureau is
also keen to have the information made public, because they
feel that graduates could be taking on too much debt, and if
lenders could see their student loans, they would ensure that
graduates are not given the ability to borrow beyond their
means.
However, the Department for
Education and Skills is showing no signs of wavering on its
decision to keep individuals' debts to the Student Loan Company
private.
For the foreseeable future –
the situation will remain the same and student loans
information will be inaccessible to the credit
industry.
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