The plans for ÂŁ25,000 loans were unexpectedly unveiled in this yearâs Budget, following the announcement of ÂŁ10,000 loans for taught masterâs students in last Decemberâs Autumn Statement.
But while the masterâs loans were widely welcomed, respondents to the Department for Business, Innovation and Skillsâ consultation into the loan schemes, which closed on Friday, worry that loans for PhDs could threaten existing studentships and dampen take-up of doctoral study.
The Royal Society says in its that PhD studentsâ contribution to the research base is such that funding them via studentship, rather than loans, is âmore appropriateâŠthan it might be for taught higher educationâ.
While demand for the loans would probably be high in disciplines with large numbers of self-funded students, there is âno reasonâ to believe this would âcorrespond to national research prioritiesâ.
Âé¶č
The society also worries that loans could break the ânexusâ between the availability of funding and the excellence of applicants. This would weaken universitiesâ incentive to âselect only the best studentsâ and risk a decline in âthe average quality of postgraduate research studentsâ.
It also fears that the introduction of loans might see the value of studentships to individuals decline â and, over time, see the total available funding for studentships eroded.
Âé¶č
The Institute of Physics says that this would âprobably lead to the opposite effect on demand than the policy intends, as PhD students [would] have to either take on debts where previously they wouldnât, or self-fund more of their living costs outside their PhDâ.
The institute also echoes the Royal Societyâs concerns about quality, saying: âSafeguards and oversight wouldâŠneed to be built into a loans system, perhaps within universities or research councils, which would act to approve a student or project as eligible for a loan.â
It notes that ÂŁ25,000 would not cover the full costs of a PhD. But even the availability of a loan that did so would not necessarily encourage students into PhDs given the âyears of debtâ they have already accrued through prior study.
The Royal Society of Chemistry stresses that loans, while welcome, should not displace existing studentships. Requiring PhD students to take out a loan âcould be off-putting and risks harming the diversity of the research workforceâ.
Âé¶č
The Million+ group of post-92 universities says that it is difficult to consider the merits of the PhD loans proposals given the governmentâs failure to define the problem it is trying to address. But if students are unable to obtain grants under the current systemâŠthere is potential to look at those rules and regulations [instead]â, it says.
But others are more positive. The University Alliance of post-92 universities compared with the present funding situation, PhD loans âshould be widely welcomedâ, and were likely to encourage students into doctoral study.
The GuildHE group of small and specialist institutions also says that loans would âwiden the pool of potential [postgraduate research students], meaning that the best students are able to undertake research degrees, regardless of their financial circumstancesâ. This would âimprove the general quality and competitiveness of postgraduate researchâ.
On the master's scheme, Million+, the University Alliance and GuildHE all question the restriction of the ÂŁ10,000 loans to students under 30, stressing that lack of finance is an issue for those of all ages.
Âé¶č
They also question the exclusion from eligibility of those studying at less than 50 per cent of full-time intensity. Million+ says: âThe risk is that the scheme harms flexibility of provision as institutions and students elect to study courses on the basis of the loan scheme eligibility, rather than on academic needs.â
The Russell Group said that it was not intending to circulate its response to the consultation. The British Academy said it would publish its response later in the week.
Âé¶č
Ìę
Ìę
Register to continue
Why register?
- Registration is free and only takes a moment
- Once registered, you can read 3 articles a month
- Sign up for our newsletter
Subscribe
Or subscribe for unlimited access to:
- Unlimited access to news, views, insights & reviews
- Digital editions
- Digital access to °Ő±á·Ąâs university and college rankings analysis
Already registered or a current subscriber?




