Labour promises to cut tuition fees to £6,000
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/education-31640592
"Ed Miliband says Labour would cut university tuition fees in England to £6,000 per year from autumn 2016."
If this happens, this will mean that tuition fees went 3000->9000->6000, meaning that a typical three year course would incur a loan of £9000, £27000 or £18000 respectively.
How are the students with the £27000 loan supposed to compete in the future job market, when candidates
with the same degree both older than them and younger than them will be able to accept a lower wage (or derive a greater net income from the same wage)? Should Labour be backdating the £6000 pa to 2010? And why is it waiting until 2016 to bring the fees down, rather than doing it in 2015 if they get in?
This matters to current students. It's not nice for them to know that, for the course they're on and paying £27000 for, students a few years before them paid £9000 and students a few years after them will be paying £18000 should Labour get in, and that this will reduce their competitiveness in the job market.