Speaking to the BBC, Reeves argued that the current model is progressive because graduates only begin repaying once they earn above a set income threshold, and any remaining balance is written off after a fixed period. She also emphasised that, because roughly half of young people do not attend university, it would be unfair for non-graduates to shoulder the cost of higher education entirely through general taxation.
In theory, the system is designed to function more like a graduate contribution than a conventional loan. Repayments are income-contingent rather than fixed, meaning those on lower wages pay little or nothing, while higher earners contribute more over time. Reeves has repeatedly presented this as a balanced compromise between access to university and fiscal responsibility.
In practice, however, critics argue the system now operates very differently from how it is described. The freezing of the repayment threshold in cash terms means that as wages rise, more graduates are drawn into repayments earlier and remain in the system for longer. Combined with high interest rates, this has led campaigners to characterise student loans as a long-term earnings tax rather than a temporary debt.
Official data shows that a significant proportion of graduates are unlikely ever to repay their loans in full. For many, particularly those on middling incomes, repayments can stretch across most of their working lives, with interest accumulating faster than balances fall. The result is a system in which the headline debt figure grows year after year, even as repayments are made.
The issue is further sharpened by generational comparisons. Graduates who entered university before successive rounds of reform face lower interest rates, higher repayment thresholds and shorter repayment periods. Younger graduates, by contrast, are entering a labour market marked by higher housing costs, weaker job security and slower real-terms wage growth, while being asked to contribute more for longer.
Reeves has rejected claims that the system is fundamentally broken, warning that large-scale reform would carry significant costs and risk diverting funding from other public services. For now, she has signalled continuity rather than overhaul.
But the political challenge is becoming harder to ignore. A system that may be fair in design is increasingly viewed as unfair in effect. As graduate debt rises and repayment periods lengthen, pressure is growing on the government to explain why higher education funding relies so heavily on a generation already facing persistent economic disadvantage.
Source: BBC News — Rachel Reeves defends student loan system as “fair and reasonable”









