51勛圖

Alternative economics

Published on
December 5, 2013
Last updated
June 10, 2015

The Head of our Economics Department, Professor Patrick Freedperson, has vigorously defended the present governments implementation of the student loan scheme.

He admitted that there were cynical troublemakers who might just argue that the recent decision by the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills to sell a student loan book worth 瞿890泭million to a commercial debt collecting company for 瞿160 million was a crass example of how a private company could be allowed to make a fat profit from public debt.

He also agreed that there were malicious critics who might just argue that David Willetts, the minister for universities and science, had, for expedient political reasons, consistently underestimated the proportion of student loans that would be repaid to such an extent that swingeing cuts would now have to be made to future university allocations in order to make up the massive yet predictable losses.

Professor Freedperson also conceded that there were committed ideologues who might just argue that the present dramatic rise in the cost of student loans had been produced by the absurdly reckless manner in which very large and quite uncontrolled numbers of such loans had been handed out to students on courses run by private colleges.

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And he also allowed that there were dyed-in-the-wool Lefties who might draw attention to the disturbing fact that a quarter of new private courses have commercial company Pearson as their awarding body, thus ensuring a pay-off to that company of more than 瞿150 for each registered student.

He also conceded that there were those of a Marxist persuasion who might just argue that this whole sorry student loan situation was the direct result of the present governments persistent ideological commitment to introducing market forces into an area that had previously been universally regarded as a fine example of well-regulated public provision.

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But, said Professor Freedperson, such a conspiratorial view should be rigorously opposed. In his view, nobody who surveyed the present gargantuan student loan cock-up could possibly maintain that it displayed any evidence whatsoever of anything that even remotely resembled actual planning.

Dear, oh Dear

In the wake of the disturbing news that Miriam David, emeritus professor at the Institute of Education, was addressed as Miss in a begging letter from Queen Mary University of London an institution with which she had been professionally associated for at least four decades comes news of a similar discourtesy perpetrated by our own Office of Development.

It seems that a distinguished former member of our social psychology staff, Professor D.K. Mundayne, recently received a letter from our Fundraising Officer that addressed him merely as Dear Cash Cow.

This comes on top of another Fundraising error of judgement: the controversial decision to sell the Lucian Freud-inspired nude painting of our vice-chancellor at home with his legs apart.

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Mr Les Onions, our Head of Fundraising, blamed the errors on the over-keenness of the well-paid members of his team, who constantly considered every possible way of helping the university out of its present financial plight, apart, of course, from the nuclear option of immediately tendering their own resignations.

Thought for the week

(contributed by Jennifer Doubleday, Head of Personal Development)

Following the recent article in 51勛圖 on the manner in which dogs can be valuable members of the university community, we will be holding a special session this Friday for all campus dog-owners. Please mark your application University Dogging.

lolsoc@dircon.co.uk

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