Student Loans! British VS American

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  • čas přidán 29. 08. 2020
  • Today, Corry and I chat about how student loans work in the US and the UK. Different plans, interest rates, and the debt going away? HERE WE GO!
    Corry: / @notcorry
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    Thank you so much for watching! Hope you enjoyed it!
    If you're new to my channel and videos, hi! I'm Evan Edinger, and I make weekly "comedy" videos every Sunday evening. As an American living in London I love noticing the funny differences between the cultures and one of my most popular video series is my British VS American one. I'm also known for making terrible puns so sorry in advance. Hope to see you around, and I'll see you next Sunday! :)
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Komentáře • 2,3K

  • @sominboy2757
    @sominboy2757 Před 3 lety +2627

    When youve paid 120,000$ over 10 years on a 80k loan and still you owe 76k then youve screwed up as a nation

    • @Travelbyailsa
      @Travelbyailsa Před 3 lety +33

      Wow

    • @ZainabProductions
      @ZainabProductions Před 3 lety +62

      I saw that tiktok so sad

    • @liammargetts
      @liammargetts Před 3 lety +33

      Nah nah this makes a lot of sense, 124,000$ = 4,000$ obviously

    • @katiesc4476
      @katiesc4476 Před 3 lety +8

      Liam Miles-Margetts the 120,000$ is in interest not directly taking the total amount borrowed down

    • @Bobthedestroyer1990
      @Bobthedestroyer1990 Před 3 lety +14

      Fun fact, you don’t have to sign up for student loans

  • @toroallin5734
    @toroallin5734 Před 3 lety +2508

    “You pay more out of state. You’re a country. States should be friends.😂” - Corey. I love this 😂😂

    • @samcoupland
      @samcoupland Před 3 lety +34

      Scotland vs England/Wales (don't know about NI) we have the same issue here.

    • @raindrop5273
      @raindrop5273 Před 3 lety +18

      Lol, it is because there are state taxes paid to those schools by state residents so state students can go cheaper.

    • @wombatpandaa9774
      @wombatpandaa9774 Před 3 lety +3

      If only, man...if only

    • @anomalily
      @anomalily Před 3 lety +14

      The western US states do have an agreement! So WA, OR, NV, ID, and CA are in-state for all three at public universities.

    • @raindrop5273
      @raindrop5273 Před 3 lety +1

      @@anomalily Out of staters are limited. Isn't AZ counted too?

  • @orcocan
    @orcocan Před 3 lety +496

    I'm glad you made that point. "Student loans" in the UK are not loans at all, they're essentially a graduate tax with a notional value. The more you earn after graduation the more you pay, otherwise you don't pay anything. What loan behaves like that?

    • @lordblazer
      @lordblazer Před 2 lety +48

      it has to otherwise their economy would not do so well. like look at the US. 30 somethings putting off having kids (smaller future workforce), putting off buying a house (student loans hold them back significantly) reluctant to invest in businesses, start a business and invest in the stock market.. Oooo yea they're not really saving up for a retirement because they can't. In the US people will likely be paying off their student loans long after the retirement age.

    • @elizabethgrosvenor153
      @elizabethgrosvenor153 Před 2 lety +9

      True, but most tax does not stop. Student loans you will reach the limit of if you earn enough and then you don't pay anymore.

    • @grumpyratt2163
      @grumpyratt2163 Před 2 lety +1

      Also factor in that Welsh Students dont pay student fees if they go to a welsh university

    • @mroosie7488
      @mroosie7488 Před 2 lety +6

      @@grumpyratt2163 Welsh student do pay tuition. It’s Scotland that don’t . Welsh students can get a grant that covers their tuition if they choose to study in the Welsh language.

    • @grumpyratt2163
      @grumpyratt2163 Před 2 lety +3

      @@mroosie7488 Excuse me but I work at the University of Cardiff. And welsh students don't pay tuition fees .

  • @RachaelTheBlonde
    @RachaelTheBlonde Před 2 lety +117

    "The states are a country! They should be friends"
    That was the most adorable statement to make when talking about a country where all the states get to make up their own laws and most of them would rather separate from each other entirely

  • @mouseluva
    @mouseluva Před 3 lety +2041

    Oh Evan looks so wounded when he thinks about how evil America is. Someone get this lad a hug and a cup of tea!!

    • @sominboy2757
      @sominboy2757 Před 3 lety +47

      I rate this suggestion 5/5 crumpets

    • @TinOfBeans
      @TinOfBeans Před 3 lety +33

      10/10 scone(s)
      Wait scone or scone?!?!

    • @blisles7626
      @blisles7626 Před 3 lety +9

      Also banana bread. I am about to make banana bread.

    • @blisles7626
      @blisles7626 Před 3 lety +9

      @@TinOfBeans Scone as in throne. Or scone as in gone. I can't actually work out which I say more.

    • @antonycharnock2993
      @antonycharnock2993 Před 3 lety +10

      @@TinOfBeans No. Its scone.

  • @rcm926
    @rcm926 Před 3 lety +1915

    Most things are like:
    Europe - we've got a sensible system where people get stuff for free and pay through taxes
    UK - we have a stupid system but at least we've tried to make it fair so that people don't needlessly suffer
    US - MONEY MONEY MONEY MONEY GIMME ALL YA DOLLA DOLLA BILLS YO

    • @mairisberzins8677
      @mairisberzins8677 Před 3 lety +270

      Average tax rate in the US: 14%
      Average tax rate in the UK: 23.3%
      In the mere 9.3% increase you get free healthcare, tuition loans you are not forced to pay back in full and many other benefits...
      US people: IT'S MY MONEY!!! Why would I give MY money to someone else.
      Meanwhile a random US citizen: Get caught in the crossfire in one of the many shootings.
      US: Give a tenth of your income for health insurance and still have to pay a shit ton just to care for a gunshot wound or straight up give away months worth of salary if you don't have insurance.
      But hey... I guess you save those 9.3% in tax xD

    • @Kizron_Kizronson
      @Kizron_Kizronson Před 3 lety +194

      @@mairisberzins8677 Not to forget that Americans pay tax on ALL their earnings. British taxpayers don't get taxed on the first £10,000 (ish) they earn. Also Americans have to do their own taxes.

    • @mercy871
      @mercy871 Před 3 lety +28

      U.K. is in Europe

    • @mairisberzins8677
      @mairisberzins8677 Před 3 lety +10

      @@mercy871 and what difference does it make?

    • @rcm926
      @rcm926 Před 3 lety +109

      @@mercy871 The UK is considered distinct from Europe in many respects, namely the fact that it's not part of continental Europe, it was a much lesser integrated member of the EU and has now left, and is culturally much closer to other English speaking countries rather than European ones. Also when people talk about Europe they rarely mean to include the UK, especially if they're from the UK themselves. Just because the UK is considered a European country by proxy doesn't mean it's incorrect to talk about them as being two separate entities.

  • @Lauren_3000
    @Lauren_3000 Před 3 lety +453

    Can we talk about the fact that the debt doesn't get wiped if you die??

    • @ketianaosias6424
      @ketianaosias6424 Před 3 lety +51

      It does. It’s just that if you co-signed with someone else, they’ll come after them when you die. Most student loans are wiped out when you die but only if you didn’t co-signed with anyone.

    • @rachaelevans8351
      @rachaelevans8351 Před 3 lety

      @@ketianaosias6424 what about through marriage?

    • @ketianaosias6424
      @ketianaosias6424 Před 3 lety

      @@rachaelevans8351 what do you mean? If the student loan goes away through marriage?

    • @Nicole-Lily
      @Nicole-Lily Před 3 lety +20

      @@rachaelevans8351 as long as your loans are from before you got married and your partner is not named on your loans they are not responsible for it, and if they take it out of your tax return your partner can file something so it wont affect their part of the tax return.

    • @kratzikatz1
      @kratzikatz1 Před 3 lety

      @@ketianaosias6424 It's like dieing!😕😉😈😊😇

  • @03timdol
    @03timdol Před 3 lety +327

    The great thing about the UK system is it levels the playing field after people graduate. If you do well from your degree and get a great career that pays well you pay back your student loans for the privilege. If the jobs market is crap when you leave and you don't end up benefiting from your degree you don't pay it back (or at least not to the same extent). Also, I really like that (as far as I am aware) having UK student loan debt does not count against you when applying for a mortgage etc.

    • @cocoacoolness
      @cocoacoolness Před 2 lety +11

      Yeah same with Australia, although I've heard of you only have a little bit of your loan owing whne you apply for a mortgage, it's good to just pay it off because it technically increases your after tax income slightly

    • @karlhogan1459
      @karlhogan1459 Před 2 lety +19

      Can confirm when we went for our mortgage they asked about debt, my wife said about her student loan and they were like “no that’s not real debt we don’t care”.

    • @alexkelly4185
      @alexkelly4185 Před 2 lety +6

      It does depend on the bank, student loan isn’t on your credit file but they often will ask for your current outstanding balance and will see your repayment amount from your payslips, so they will factor it into affordability criteria.

    • @CynnaAel
      @CynnaAel Před 2 lety +2

      The UK and Europe doesn’t have credit scores like the US has. It’s ridiculous and it makes no sense

    • @Amin.Ashraf
      @Amin.Ashraf Před rokem +2

      That's nice. In my country, students that got 4.0 GPA would get 100% discount or less, depends on family income. CGPA above 3.5 students also would get a discount. Students that gets below 2.0 GPA have to pay the semester tuition out of pocket. That mean perfect score students don't have to pay their debt. Also depends on your family income, you're only eligible for loan that's less than your tuition fee.

  • @carolynx2826
    @carolynx2826 Před 3 lety +958

    The whole Scottish uni is free to everyone but England, Wales and NI makes me laugh because anyone I know who studied in Scotland from NI just got an Irish passport so their tuition was free 😂😂

    • @BBC600
      @BBC600 Před 3 lety +51

      Really? I was told that it was all based on residency and not just citzenships. In my case I'm a dual citizen (Canada & the UK) but was told I would have to live in Scotland 3 years to get any free tuition.

    • @edups5854
      @edups5854 Před 3 lety +30

      @@BBC600 Same here. I'm Scottish but currently live in England so I had to live there for 2/3 years before being eligible for free tuition.

    • @s.osullivan1193
      @s.osullivan1193 Před 3 lety +54

      They’re saying that people got Irish passports so they payed the EU price, which is the same as the Scottish price so free

    • @sarahstewart5559
      @sarahstewart5559 Před 3 lety +29

      That’s doesn’t work anymore. So many people took advantage of the loop hole you had to prove residency. When I applied to start uni in 2015, I’d have paid £9000 to go to a Scottish uni.

    • @stephanieseahorse7931
      @stephanieseahorse7931 Před 3 lety +1

      I thought you had to live In Scotland for at least 6 months to get free tuition.

  • @bertaroo
    @bertaroo Před 3 lety +945

    Suggestion: British 🇬🇧 vs American 🇺🇸 history (learnt in school not in horrible histories because that is what we all truly learnt it from in Britain)

    • @rebekahl840
      @rebekahl840 Před 3 lety +45

      Horrible Histories.
      Thats it

    • @tammybabes3753
      @tammybabes3753 Před 3 lety +10

      @@rebekahl840 innit

    •  Před 3 lety +6

      Yeah, that'd be great

    • @owenfautley
      @owenfautley Před 3 lety +22

      @@tammybabes3753 My (senior school) teacher was a bit older so we got black adder and the boy in the striped pyjamas.
      RIP Shmuel.

    • @rebekahl840
      @rebekahl840 Před 3 lety +2

      @@tammybabes3753 ya

  • @rach_lace3979
    @rach_lace3979 Před 3 lety +378

    So knowing how bad student loans get over here in the US I decided very early on that I would not taking out any student loans for my college degree... I have been in college since January of 2014 and will finally graduate this December because of how I had to take classes in order to afford everything. My advisers contently yelled at me about how I was not going to graduate "on time" and how the decision I was making was not a very smart one because of how slow I was going through school and now I just want to send them this video and say "well this is why I did it". I will now be graduating debt free and could not be more excited about it.

    • @fishergirlsam
      @fishergirlsam Před 2 lety +77

      I did something similar, it took me 8 years to get a bachelor's degree (a 4 year degree) because I never took student loans and worked while in school, interned over summers and took a year off to work every other year. I don't regret any of it. I graduated later but with lots of experience and now don't have debt. the idea you have to graduate "on time" is a huge scam

    • @naagwalan8867
      @naagwalan8867 Před 2 lety +28

      Congrats, honestly that sounds amazing. Obviously as Brit I can only imagine that struggle but you managed it really well.

    • @A.D.540
      @A.D.540 Před 2 lety +5

      @Thomas 700 Jesus in UK its 350 for BA degree. You American need to change the system.

    • @taibabajar
      @taibabajar Před 2 lety

      Well done

    • @keyboardsmash3983
      @keyboardsmash3983 Před 2 lety +9

      You were able to pay your way through collage- via work? that's awesome!!!! love tat you managed to stick those financial advisors in their place

  • @melissataylor3598
    @melissataylor3598 Před 3 lety +53

    I see the uk student loan system as a graduates tax, and the amount you pay back depends basically on how well your degree served you, if your degree got you an amazing and well-paid job then you’ll pay it all off, if you spend your whole life on low income then your degree didn’t work as well so you don’t need to pay as much for it.

  • @cam6963
    @cam6963 Před 3 lety +525

    I love that Evan literally built a whole CZcams channel around how shitty America is.

    • @charlotteinnocent8752
      @charlotteinnocent8752 Před 3 lety +71

      Don't think he meant it, but I am an American living abroad, and a lot of the reason the American government is able to get away with being this cruddy to their own people is because Americans don't travel and don't realise the rest of the world is getting a MUCH better deal. Once we DO see it, we kinda want to RANT.

    • @cam6963
      @cam6963 Před 3 lety +18

      @@charlotteinnocent8752 Oh my gosh I do not remember writing this lol! But yeah, that makes a lot of sense

    • @charlotteinnocent8752
      @charlotteinnocent8752 Před 3 lety +8

      @@cam6963 I only got around to seeing it today, but I have been guilty of many such a rant!

    • @yourneighborhoodwierdo8349
      @yourneighborhoodwierdo8349 Před 3 lety +2

      i dont think he meant it to be that way but yeah ur right

    • @hesky10
      @hesky10 Před 3 lety +11

      I've met many Americans who have come to the UK to study, live, or vacation, and they've said that the UK is better than the US, and the same when they explored other European countries.

  • @halliehurst4847
    @halliehurst4847 Před 3 lety +672

    “If I did renounce US citizenship it would be for political reasons...”
    So November could be interesting for you... 🥴😅

    • @judgejudyslover
      @judgejudyslover Před 3 lety +7

      I’m not a trump lover but the democrats are like a child having a tantrum

    • @chanelfitzgerald
      @chanelfitzgerald Před 3 lety +5

      @@judgejudyslover Trump has already won. Not a fan of his, but he's won.

    • @mtoythegoat673
      @mtoythegoat673 Před 3 lety +1

      Chanel Fitzgerald I hope so

    • @bodyloverz30
      @bodyloverz30 Před 3 lety +1

      If Biden wins, many of us will leave!

    • @unlikelyspecimen244
      @unlikelyspecimen244 Před 3 lety +7

      Someone remind Canada to close their borders in advance

  • @lazymusician10
    @lazymusician10 Před 3 lety +53

    "That's disgusting!" "OH MY GOSH! That's awful!"
    Yes, it is Corey; I love your reaction to this.

  • @dmitrymashkov9379
    @dmitrymashkov9379 Před 3 lety +107

    Thanks man for bringing so much detailed information about education! I realized that it was a proper decision not to relocate to the US but to stay in Europe where I don't have to pay for my children's education. Otherwise I'd go bankrupt sooner than I say "I am so proud you joined this school"

    • @marydavis5234
      @marydavis5234 Před 3 lety +1

      you only pay for students grades k to 12, if your children go to private school, public school is paid for by the state you live in

  • @tamptv8062
    @tamptv8062 Před 3 lety +537

    *starts uni in two weeks*
    *sees title get scared*
    *remembers Im Scottish and everything’s okay*

    • @mcbusted1985
      @mcbusted1985 Před 3 lety +2

      You’re so cute. When you graduate and are paying higher tax than the English, you’ll feel stupid for posting this.

    • @tamptv8062
      @tamptv8062 Před 3 lety +71

      @@mcbusted1985 thanks for calling me cute then :))

    • @lotharschmal7991
      @lotharschmal7991 Před 2 lety +59

      @@mcbusted1985 Im sure he’ll feel super stupid. I can see it already, TamPTV waking up at 3:00 am, sweating and panting, he whispers “God these Scottish taxes, I feel so stupid for not being English and commenting that on CZcams 5 years ago”
      “Well at least Im cute”

    • @AdamGaffney96
      @AdamGaffney96 Před 2 lety +69

      @@mcbusted1985 oh no, I pay roughly £10 a month more in taxes than the English and got a completely free education which enabled me to get this job in the first place...how awful...

    • @riccardomarsala985
      @riccardomarsala985 Před 2 lety +15

      As an Italian who wants to study in Scotland, I loathe Brexit so much

  • @Bumi-90
    @Bumi-90 Před 3 lety +532

    I would have loved it if a German student was with them in this video, just staring shocked at them and not saying a single word the entire video.

    • @corastone9820
      @corastone9820 Před 3 lety +2

      Why?

    • @onelasttenderplace
      @onelasttenderplace Před 3 lety +72

      @@corastone9820 I'm guessing uni is free in Germany, as it is in many other European countries :)

    • @kanal05felix05
      @kanal05felix05 Před 3 lety +57

      @@onelasttenderplace More or less yes. You pay like 700€ a year. And that includes public transport

    • @onelasttenderplace
      @onelasttenderplace Před 3 lety +30

      @@kanal05felix05 omg that's still a lot, we only pay 30€ in Slovenia 😭

    • @Bumi-90
      @Bumi-90 Před 3 lety +32

      @@kanal05felix05 and if you need a loan you can get one for 0% interest.
      But only if your family isn't able to fully support you.

  • @Mishie146
    @Mishie146 Před 3 lety +17

    I got my master's degree in Newcastle Upon Tyne, the whole thing: visa, tuition, flights, room and board, misc fees cost 1/3 what it would to study in my home state of California . Not to mention it was one intensive year in the UK vs 2 years in the US.

  • @jakobwallman7795
    @jakobwallman7795 Před 3 lety +47

    In Sweden tuition is free for university and my student loan right has an interest rate of 0.16 % so it+s pretty sweet!

  • @struebz
    @struebz Před 3 lety +383

    I’m paying a hefty £3 a month towards my student loan now... the panic I had about student loans after doing 4 years in uni to end up paying £3 is great

    • @Ava-cw3jf
      @Ava-cw3jf Před 3 lety +15

      Wow! How do you afford that?

    • @mikeharvey2129
      @mikeharvey2129 Před 3 lety +2

      Doesn't it depend on your income bracket how much you pay?

    • @11alekon
      @11alekon Před 3 lety +29

      @@mikeharvey2129 from my understanding, if you make less than 25k you don't pay anything. Then you pay a small % on money which is over 25k

    • @romainviry3185
      @romainviry3185 Před 3 lety +5

      I wish you good luck in saving this Half pint for the sake of debt recovering each month

    • @alfie6683
      @alfie6683 Před 3 lety +22

      that’s a whole ONE LESS MEAL DEAL MONTH! 😱

  • @teresaw9865
    @teresaw9865 Před 3 lety +567

    oh my gosh, this is so sad and upsetting. I'm from Austria and I went to university (5 years) for free. Let that sink in. Only if you attend a special university for applied sciences or in general you exceed the minimum period of study by 2 or more semesters, you have to pay 363, 36€ per semester. I am so grateful, that this is the system in place here and we're not crippled by student loans for the rest of our lives. I feel for all of you, let me give you a virtual hug.

    • @timothyjames6412
      @timothyjames6412 Před 3 lety +40

      UK students are not crippled by loans, whatever they feel about it. In practice, it has very little impact. (Source of my information on this: I am a University lecturer and the Admissions tutor for my academic school, so I have to know this stuff. Also, my daughter is a student so we had to fill in the student finance applications for her).

    • @morganmitchell4017
      @morganmitchell4017 Před 2 lety +24

      @@timothyjames6412 Exactly - the UK's system is one of the fairest going. I think it strikes the right balance between letting poorer students go to university without being financially crippled, while also not taking (too much) money in taxes from people who never went.

    • @johanwittens7712
      @johanwittens7712 Před 2 lety +15

      @@timothyjames6412 How does being indebted for a few ten thousand pounds NOT impact a person just starting out? Of course it does. They might not be crippled, but they DO spend the first years of their professional lives working to repay their debt.
      You should not have to go into debt just to get an education imo. I could study in a system with cheap education and didn't have debt after my studies. And I can guarantee you it allowed me to be much more relaxed about what job i took and which i didn't, and could even afford not to work every now and then while figuring out what i actually wanted to do.
      I now am a super motivated teacher. And i came to the realisation I wanted to become a teacher during those first professional years, and even could go back to evening shool to get my teacher diploma, again at barely any cost. If i had had a debt of 20000 euro or more, and HAD to have worked to repay that, i probably never would have become a teacher.
      So you can be sure that student debt impacts young people in ways you probably never even considered. To be free from debt gives you financial freedom, and thus also freedom in your life and life choices.

    • @eddiemartin2268
      @eddiemartin2268 Před 2 lety +15

      @@johanwittens7712 But, in the UK which is where Timothy was talking about, if you went to uni and had £60k debt and then earned a small amount of money (25k/yr) you wouldn't pay anything back!
      You could go back to uni and study again and pay nothing back for a few more years
      Then you can take another year out after uni and pay nothing back.
      Then once you find a well paying job, IF you earn more than £27k you pay 9% of what you earn over that amount. So you pay back money, but only if you can afford it.
      It feels like a fair way to mainly tax only the people who use the service and who can afford it.
      The cost of education comes from somewhere surely. Either everyone is taxed to pay for the people that use it, or the people that use it are given a small, fair extra tax.
      'Free' education is surely just lumping the cost into everybody's tax so you are still paying for it, but so is your mate who didn't study and only just earns enough to get taxed.
      Edit: in the UK it is definitely more like a tax for 30yrs after you graduate (but you stop paying if you pay off what your borrowed) rather than a loan or debt.

    • @gypseenomad3956
      @gypseenomad3956 Před 2 lety +1

      America and the greed.

  • @gelassenbleibenalsmama
    @gelassenbleibenalsmama Před rokem +13

    OMG, Evan fighting tears over the interest rate of 1.1 😢 The whole student loan thing in the US blows my German mind 🥺

  • @MKRM27
    @MKRM27 Před 3 lety +27

    You don’t have to go back that many years (20?) until you’re in the era when university was free in the UK, and students were entitled to apply to non-repayable grants.

    • @ameliaxiulan6797
      @ameliaxiulan6797 Před 2 lety +4

      my parents got their degrees for free TuT i have to repay mine, but as corey said- it cuts off after 30 years and its only 9% of extra earnings above £27000 yearly income so im glad its only that and not whatever hellish plan the US has

  • @nicolinesofia4107
    @nicolinesofia4107 Před 3 lety +122

    As a danish student, I find it absurd that you have to pay for your education. Students in Denmark get paid around £900 a month by the government to study!

    • @timothyjames6412
      @timothyjames6412 Před 3 lety +11

      This used to be the case in the UK (I was a student in the 80s and got a subsistence grant). The intention of changing to loans was to reduce the burden on the taxpayer, but it didn't work - the state still pays upfront, and recovers very little.

    • @alexwood3459
      @alexwood3459 Před 3 lety +2

      This is true in a number of countries and tbh free uni was an option for me but it was just easier to go to uni in Australia (I was living in the UK at the time I decided) and I prefer the university system in Australia over the European/UK model. I also got paid to attend university (and technically got more money than I have in loans, but obviously I used it for living expenses over the years I was studying). Whilst 'free' (or super low cost) uni would be nice I can understand the arguments against it and I don't mind the UK/Australian system where it does function like a tax for people that actually went to uni. The Australian system is getting worse and more expensive, with less support (although there is still some support that is far more accessible than the non-Scottish UK and it's still half the price) so I guess I'd say I prefer the 2010 model. If I go to uni again I'll probably go for free in Scotland but I would feel perfectly comfortable studying in Australia again, I don't feel that cost is prohibitive to anyone wanting to studying at a higher level in Australia. Living costs if you don't have a job might be prohibitive as the government support for students is below the poverty line.

    • @emmahoppmann9353
      @emmahoppmann9353 Před 3 lety

      i am now hella jelly now

  • @geekygalaxy4307
    @geekygalaxy4307 Před 3 lety +77

    In the uk, if you’re studying to be a nurse then you get a bonus £5000 per year for free from the government

    • @mentak2593
      @mentak2593 Před 2 lety +7

      And here I am in the US, a Nurse Practitioner (masters degree) and owe close to $200k. Ahh, lovely isn’t it?

    • @India.H
      @India.H Před 2 lety +7

      Which they should save to pay their bills later on in life due to the outrageously low salary they get 😡

    • @beth22.
      @beth22. Před 2 lety

      @@mentak2593 hold on I'm so confused right now. When I've finished my 3 year bachelor of nursing degree in Australia, it will be $10650 and I rounded the price up and I thought that was expensive but I guess not? 😂

    • @juliancain3872
      @juliancain3872 Před 2 lety

      @@beth22. Oh 10k? That's how much I owe now ten years later. Initially after I graduated I owed a little over $70,000 for a undergrad in the comp science field and could only land a help desk job. Private university😅.... im lucky i didn't go 100k over.

  • @BJ_Freeplay
    @BJ_Freeplay Před 3 lety +40

    Evan: Says anything about America*
    Everyone else: Is horrified*
    The rest of us: Yeahhhhh, sounds about right.

  • @BillyLingard
    @BillyLingard Před 3 lety +19

    It’s a least a decent system in the UK when I think of making it to PHD I could end up with £168,000 of debt and not have to worry about it at all

  • @robertgronewold3326
    @robertgronewold3326 Před 3 lety +192

    I'm American, and I had the WORST luck when I was a teenager thinking about college. I was a B honor roll student, so not horrible, but not wonderful either. HOWEVER, just after I turned 18, I had my identity stolen, which tanked my credit score, immediately removing the remotest possibility that I could get a student loan. In the same period, President Bush removed the Social Security student grants, which I had been counting on because both my parents were already seniors at the time. Furthermore, I was not eligible for any grants or scholarships, because I had never been involved in extracurricular activities, mostly because I was a poorer student who lived on a farm, and I couldn't afford to drive back and forth to school out of busing hours. Essentially, I had all my avenues blocked, so now I am 32 and living off what I can get through agriculture while I try to get books published. Such fun. At the same time, with the passage of years, I am glad that I don't have a massive student debt to handle.

    • @emsalarslan2098
      @emsalarslan2098 Před 3 lety +23

      Robert Gronewold this sounds awful! It is a major shame that you were not able to get into school for this reason. My parents did not earn an income as my mum was disabled, had it not been from the sheer fact that I’m English and was able to get a loan through SFE I would not have made it. I think American systems have a lot to answer for in regards to this. However, I wish you luck on publishing. And at least you don’t have the debt! Always a silver lining.

    • @therehn
      @therehn Před 3 lety +14

      I'm studying with the Open University here in the UK, in my 30s. It's a very well respected distance learning university here. They have existed for over 50 years and do a lot of collaborations with the BBC. I am not sure how the loan system would work, but they are accredited in the US as well as the UK and in our student groups I noticed some people studying from the US and enjoying it!

    • @fredflintstone6143
      @fredflintstone6143 Před 3 lety +3

      In the US, federal financial aid (via the FAFSA) is based on household income, NEVER on extracurricular activities or credit rating. Federal student loans are "guaranteed" which means a student's credit rating never enters the picture. Financial aid professional since 1993 speaking here.

    • @robertgronewold3326
      @robertgronewold3326 Před 3 lety +2

      @@fredflintstone6143 And I never even heard of any of that stuff until like two years ago, when I was 30. It's ridiculous how they never mention such things. Too late now.

    • @alexavalencia4369
      @alexavalencia4369 Před 3 lety +3

      @@robertgronewold3326 damn that sucks bro how about going into Trade school? No one in their right mind says less plumbers, electricians, etc
      For me though everyone always forgets the Trade schools. So might as well go into Trade school.

  • @ala0284
    @ala0284 Před 3 lety +600

    Alternative title: look how terrible the US is compared to the rest of the developed world

    • @adisonlandon9883
      @adisonlandon9883 Před 3 lety +47

      I mean that's almost every honest comparison video

    • @andrew4363
      @andrew4363 Před 3 lety +38

      Pretty much, the healthcare is the most shocking.

    • @HowdyDo42
      @HowdyDo42 Před 3 lety +12

      dont you mean, "look how terrible the US is compared to the developed world"?

    • @juliancain3872
      @juliancain3872 Před 2 lety +1

      How greedy and expensive the US is compared to the rest of the developed world.

    • @RB747domme
      @RB747domme Před 2 lety

      @@juliancain3872 I prefer the way @Casual Pessimist (above) phrased it... If you read it carefully.
      And don't worry, I'm an ex pat US citizen who lives in the UK (since '87). The more videos I see like this, I'm starting to believe that the rest of the world is developed.. and the US is... n't.
      Gerrymandering, paid lobbying, filibustering, uncontested unilateral bipartisan vote passes in Congress 420-0..
      Leader of The Senate: "Naaa.. uhh.. think we'll just skip this law."
      Of all the would-be amendments to the US Constitution, these three types of corrupt manipulation should be tagged on to the end of that sweet little piece of scroll..
      Otherwise it's worth.. well... the piece of paper that it's written on.
      It's about time we sorted our country out, and stop being so insular and greedy. I'm glad I emigrated to ne honest. I'm still shit proud of my country, and my flag, I just don't like the people supposedly in charge.

  • @Liggliluff
    @Liggliluff Před 3 lety +27

    EU: You have to treat people from a different member of this union the same as your local people.
    USA: How about no?

  • @littleladyofdeath
    @littleladyofdeath Před 2 lety +10

    As someone who lives in Tuscaloosa, everything you said is pretty accurate. In terms of "Who wants to go to Alabama," it's way cheaper to live here than it is to live in other states.

  • @mnb9172
    @mnb9172 Před 3 lety +245

    Evan: freaking out about the 1.1% interest
    Me looking at my 0% dutch interest 🙃

  • @ace_draws3331
    @ace_draws3331 Před 3 lety +371

    Hello and welcome back to a American who is always in debt because America

  • @80sGamerLady
    @80sGamerLady Před 2 lety +7

    Evan is correct. This is called predatory loans in the US. This has recently been cracked down on, especially after the economy tanked in 2008. It's why I paid as I went so it took me a long while to get a 2-year degree as I paid or used company benefits for school (where you pay and if you get good grades, they reimburse you) because I didn't want to put myself or my family in debt. I do work for the state of FL now and they pay for my uni tuition but we can only enroll once other students have enrolled so our enrollment date is usually later than others so it's not much to choose from. Plus having a family and going back to school for a 4 year degree is very difficult. But hey, at least I don't have student loan debt. 🤷

  • @ashleyfreberg8452
    @ashleyfreberg8452 Před 3 lety +14

    Every time I tell how the American loan system works to my UK coursemates they look at me like I'm telling a wild lie. They then go "well youre studying in the UK though....why aren't you getting UK loans??"....like...I wish 😭

  • @kiramabel2216
    @kiramabel2216 Před 3 lety +88

    Death - America vs UK
    I’ve recently discovered there’s so many differences with how we do things. funerals, debts, grieving
    it’s morbid but i wanna know

    • @LovelyLawla
      @LovelyLawla Před 3 lety +15

      Never mind the US and the UK, the UK and Ireland/Northern Ireland is very different! In Ireland (including NI) from the person dies until the funeral, including burial or cremation it is a maximum of 2 nights (so the funeral is on the third day). It might get extended by a day if there is an immediate family member having to fly home from abroad, or if there needs to be an autopsy, etc. And for the two nights, the coffin is usually at the person's home where family and friends (including friends of your family, even if they never met your Grandfather for example). It blows my mind that in the UK, you have to process someone's death, maybe take a day or two off work, but then go back to work for 3-4 weeks (or more) and then take another day or two off for the funeral.

    • @cocoacoolness
      @cocoacoolness Před 2 lety +3

      Is it true that Americans all stand around the coffin as its put in the ground, nobody crying, just staring, and that is basically the funeral? I've always wondered how accurate the movies are because this sounds so strange compared to funerals I've been to in Australia. For us, we go to a funeral parlour thing, coffin up the front. People do lots of speeches, might read poems etc. Everyone is crying, even old men who you never ever see cry. And after that, we all say bye and then go and get super drunk.

    • @marywallace3378
      @marywallace3378 Před 2 lety +3

      @@cocoacoolness US citizen here. The part you always see on TV is the burial ceremony, which usually happens after the funeral. The actual funeral, the coffin is at the front and people can go up and see it and then there is a service where people give speeches etc. It can depend on what each family wants to do, but sometimes the burial ceremony is reserved for family only. It’s basically just a final send off after the funeral service. It’s a closure thing, I think, to watch the coffin go in the ground. And then after that there may be a wake, which is the equivalent of you getting super drunk, except that for us it’s usually just a bunch of food and talking. Every funeral is different though, some do a service, burial, and wake or some other combo. The crying thing also depends on each family and their culture. For example, I’m white and most white funerals I attend, there’s some crying but nothing too dramatic. But I went to my black best friend’s aunt’s funeral and everyone was in tears, letting their emotions take over them. It was heartbreaking. So it really again just depends on each family. I have seen a lot of American tv shows that portray funerals the way you’ve described and that is weird to me too now that you bring it up.

  • @beckygreer88
    @beckygreer88 Před 3 lety +325

    Was waiting to see if they brought up the tik tok of the lady almost in tears over the fact that she took out an $80k loan and has paid over $100k over the past 10 years but her balance is still something like $78k.

    • @mermaidismyname
      @mermaidismyname Před 3 lety +60

      That flat out robbery oh my god

    • @sammy-er7on
      @sammy-er7on Před 3 lety +2

      Link?

    • @beblessed7985
      @beblessed7985 Před 3 lety +14

      why do I feel suffocated just thinking about this?

    • @maddydickens7554
      @maddydickens7554 Před 3 lety

      please provide a link!!

    • @raccoon404x7
      @raccoon404x7 Před 3 lety +8

      Sad part about that video is that she exaggerated the paid vs owe situation...she posted a video and showed she’s paid ~83k towards principle and ~36k towards interest (so ~120k total). She still owes 76k or so but the loan wasn’t 80k, it was around 159k and she’s halfway through paying.
      Fucked up but in a slightly different way

  • @Brian-eh1xj
    @Brian-eh1xj Před 3 lety +21

    I’m definitely grateful as a us high schooler that I can take college classes for free (it’s called a college credit plus program) and get many of my classes done in high school for free and get credit for both levels of eduction. I’m in Ohio but I’m not sure how it works elsewhere

  • @sashaball6298
    @sashaball6298 Před 3 lety +48

    My boyfriend owes $80,000 but didn’t graduate and i owe no money and graduate this year! He wants to get married though and I’m like..... “but that loan debt...”🤣🤣🤣

    • @juliancain3872
      @juliancain3872 Před 2 lety

      So how's it going?

    • @LearningLife77
      @LearningLife77 Před 2 lety

      Prenup

    • @melyx6897
      @melyx6897 Před 2 lety +3

      So many people breakup over money issues, so talk about it now and what the plan is to pay it off. Don't wait to have that convo after you guys are married and you now realize your credit score is shot and you guys can't buy a house.

    • @ReggiePerez1784
      @ReggiePerez1784 Před 2 lety

      Ever lasting love 😂🤣😂

    • @nailaf6832
      @nailaf6832 Před 2 lety

      Make a prenup just in case you separate or death. It's his debt, not yours. You two should be open about all assets and debts each bring into the marriage to assess the financial ground before
      Then you two work out a plan to gradually pay all debt and live.
      You both need to be discipline about budgeting and manage earnings and you should be OK.

  • @Tabbiecat
    @Tabbiecat Před 3 lety +190

    The thing that's not mentioned with regard to the UK loans is that they've only been introduced recently, and during the time they've existed they've already been trebled, and now higher interest rates are coming in.. The way things have gone very much suggests we're on our way down a path towards a US style system, so while the system currently is relatively less horrific, we should still definitely be concerned

    • @Teppishc
      @Teppishc Před 3 lety +14

      Fees have increased 9 fold, they were ~£1000 early on.
      Edit: Just realised you said loans, I guess with maintenance they have roughly trebled sorry.

    • @Tabbiecat
      @Tabbiecat Před 3 lety +9

      @@Teppishc I was thinking of the loan system yeah, but that's a good point about the fees themselves.
      For me the main concern is we'll start getting private companies buying up the debt like in the US, and then you'd have potentially multiple companies with their own repayment policies chasing you for the money.
      Terrifying to think of really, especially with how much the fees and the loan system have changed in just the last 15 years or so. I graduated 2 years ago, 28 more before they're wiped is an eternity in politics. A long time for things to go increasingly downhill if we allow it :(

    • @aidenl5215
      @aidenl5215 Před 3 lety +3

      I totally agree! I started uni the year they got trebled and I have over £65,000 owed to SF and it goes up by like 5K each year because the interest rate is so high. I did a masters and so it’s more than 15% of my wage. I don’t even cover my interest because it’s so high.
      There’s a really great video by TLDR that explains how all we do is pay interest now unless you earn over around £60,000.

    • @ImMamba
      @ImMamba Před 3 lety +1

      Yeah was gonna say my interest rate is 6.5% !!! Not 1.1 anymore

    • @jacklinton4885
      @jacklinton4885 Před 3 lety +4

      Fun...meanwhile in NZ uni is becoming cheaper as time goes on - I only graduated a few years back and they've already introduced a scheme where the first year is free (for tuition) so people aren't financially ruined when they realise after a couple semesters that university isn't right for them.

  • @thelonelygeek6640
    @thelonelygeek6640 Před 3 lety +271

    As someone who is going uni next week this title terrifies me

    • @evan
      @evan  Před 3 lety +169

      *shakes maracas* welcome to debbbbbbbbt

    • @bertaroo
      @bertaroo Před 3 lety +6

      Good luck

    • @rowanbarker2576
      @rowanbarker2576 Před 3 lety +7

      @@evan that'll help 🤦‍♂️

    • @Bumi-90
      @Bumi-90 Před 3 lety +8

      I start uni in a few weeks and I won't have to get any loans, because tuition is less then 500€ a semester.
      And even if I get a loan it will be 0% interest if I'm really in need of one.
      And still everyone says my government should put more money into education.

    • @needsanewbrain
      @needsanewbrain Před 3 lety +3

      god, same. i'm starting in a couple of weeks and i've only just had the realisation that i'm going to owe a ton of money to the government afterwards.

  • @aimzzy12
    @aimzzy12 Před 3 lety +7

    Thank you so much for doing these videos! My boyfriend is an American currently studying in England and we had no idea about the tax system and about the tax bomb bullshit. He plans on staying here after his degree so all of your visa videos also really help!

  • @MrSaviper
    @MrSaviper Před 3 lety +5

    Moral of the story. Study in Germany, Austria and Switzerland the tution fees is much lower. Also chose a course that teaches in English.

  • @rossini138
    @rossini138 Před 3 lety +199

    When I was in school, a lady came to talk to us about student loans, and someone asked “so if you never earn more than £26,000 you don’t have to pay it back?” And she said “yes... but why are you going to university if you’re never going to earn more than £26k?” because she didn’t realise she was talking to a room full of Northern Irish millennials.

    • @polliec8443
      @polliec8443 Před 3 lety +31

      Tbf that's an issue all over england. Wages stagnated whilst living has gone up. When I left england last year my salary was the same that my mum made in 1988.

    • @rossini138
      @rossini138 Před 3 lety +22

      Pollie C tru dat! I just specify because the average salary in Northern Ireland is usually much lower than the rest of the UK. I assume it’s pretty much the same issue with regards to student loans everywhere though!

    • @emilyhughes4297
      @emilyhughes4297 Před 3 lety +4

      Depending on where you live £26k is an alright amount

    • @hwllhei6554
      @hwllhei6554 Před 3 lety +2

      Emily Hughes up north decent

    • @Leenapanther
      @Leenapanther Před 3 lety +3

      Someone who did an apprenticeship in informatics in Switzerland can earn 100k swiss francs (82'000£) per year (in sales it's around 50k swiss francs). There is no need to go to an university to get a high income here (only 20%of students do)

  • @andyhartley
    @andyhartley Před 3 lety +191

    I have to say as a former SU officer who had to deal with student loans a lot - Corry explains the English system very very well. Note that although the Scottish system is free (for Scottish students), there are far fewer university places per head of population than England and Wales. If Scotland had become independent in 2016 (ie, before we had the EU referendum) then they would have had to introduce fees or they would have effectively bankrupted themselves with all the English, Welsh, and Northen Irish students who suddenly wouldn't have had to pay university fees in Scotland.

    • @izzienewport
      @izzienewport Před 3 lety +1

      I have also explained in an earlier post some errors made between the distinct differences between Plan 1 and Plan 2. Plan 2 ie. current student loans are far more expensive, and have longer write off periods than the olde pre 2012 Plan 1 loans.

    • @andyhartley
      @andyhartley Před 3 lety +1

      @@izzienewport I have Plan 1 and Plan 2 loans. If I was to earn

    • @izzienewport
      @izzienewport Před 3 lety +1

      @@andyhartley You would'nt though as the income threshold is actually also an allowance much the same as a tax allowance so still 9% but 9% of more income on one plan than on the other. Its swings and roundabouts, plan 1 is cheaper with fairer right off terms but you are repaying on a bigger chunk of your income. Being on a crossover between both is fairly rare though. It will only ever affect two cohorts maximum.

    • @andyhartley
      @andyhartley Před 3 lety +1

      @@izzienewport It's because I did two courses either side of 2012. The 2011 intake are on Plan 1 for their whole course. My point is that Plan 1 is only cheaper for those earning >£34k, basically because they pay off the balance of tuition and maintenance before the 25 year cutoff - that's not an exact science because of the exact amount borrowed, interest rates, etc, but as a rule of thumb it's about right.

    • @andyhartley
      @andyhartley Před 3 lety +2

      @@izzienewport If you earn

  • @TheCaligirl1013
    @TheCaligirl1013 Před 2 lety +6

    Absolute favorite part of the video........"America really likes putting you in debt don't they. If you want to go to university, you've got to be in debt the rest of your life. If you want to get sick, you've got to be in debt the rest of your life."-Corry That is the most accurate and depressing statement I have heard about the US. I have a ton of student loan debt as well.

  • @amaristhecrow7084
    @amaristhecrow7084 Před 2 lety +5

    The scholarship thing was the same with me!!! My dad left and started a new family. His child support was 150 a month and he stopped the minute we turned 18. I had to include his income in my FAFSA. It counted against me big time. Ugh. And of course he was not going to help . He didn’t give one crap about us .

  • @cupcakebecka
    @cupcakebecka Před 3 lety +185

    I'm moving from Sweden to the UK for uni this fall, and as an EU resident I specifically chose to only apply to Scottish unis to get that free tuition 👀

    • @HomebaseLHR
      @HomebaseLHR Před 3 lety +7

      Rebecka B good luck getting a job in the middle of buttf*ck nowhere in Scotland, whereas in London I earn the London living wage and more.

    • @ryantownsley1388
      @ryantownsley1388 Před 3 lety +35

      @@HomebaseLHR I mean the majority of our jobs are all located centrally in Scotland the only buttf*ck nowhere is the highlands and above

    • @sophie4877
      @sophie4877 Před 3 lety +44

      Homebase LHR you know a tonne of people move to big cities for grad jobs right? Including those who went to uni in Scotland? Wild concept I know

    • @mairisberzins8677
      @mairisberzins8677 Před 3 lety +20

      @@sophie4877 Ignore Homebase LHR, he just can't deal with the fact that he has to pay 200 a week for accommodation or whatever it is that he lives.

    • @cupcakebecka
      @cupcakebecka Před 3 lety +22

      @@HomebaseLHR I'm not planning on staying in Scotland after my graduation, but thank you for your concern ;)

  • @PoppyCorn144
    @PoppyCorn144 Před 3 lety +136

    I scrolled but can’t see anyone answering “Why the 1st of September?”
    It’s because that’s when our school year starts. The first day back is usually the first Monday in the month of September.
    It’s also the cut off date for entry into a year e.g if twins were born on 31st of August and 1st of September the younger twin would be in the lower year.

    • @LovelyLawla
      @LovelyLawla Před 3 lety +10

      Just an FYI, in the case of twins or even just kids close to the date you can appeal/choose. If you think your child isn't mature enough ready to start school even though they should, you can go through the process to have them enrolled the year after (if done correctly) and you can do the same for twins, to have them either in both one year or the next year, depending on their development/maturity.
      But technically you can just leave them and have them a start year apart (but from a developmental perspective that makes little sense - if one is ready, both are, excluding any medical issues, disabilities, etc), but most people with twins just get them put into separate classes as they get old to ensure they don't depend too much on each other and grow as individuals, etc.

  • @1bobharvey
    @1bobharvey Před 2 lety +5

    The underlying part of the American system that was left out is by deciding where and what to go to school for you decide how big the loan is in the end. community college and in state tuition are very affordable and easy to repay. Problem is a lot of 18 year old's have champagne taste on a beer budget and the loan people will give you what ever you want at that age because you cannot get out of the loan. So essentially we let children dig how ever big of a financial hole they want, then enforce them paying it back at some point.

  • @isabelleeccles1138
    @isabelleeccles1138 Před 3 lety +5

    You are right Evan about it hitting the working middle class the most. My parents earn enough that I don’t get the full loan however they don’t make enough to support me. I have to pay an extra grand of money for my accommodation (I got left the money by my grandma) yet one of my friends got a full loan and her dad paid for her accommodation. It annoys me because I see people who don’t need a job at uni and can go out all the time yet I have to work to be able to afford food. I understand the reason behind it but it doesn’t always benefit everyone

  • @Miss_Lexisaurus
    @Miss_Lexisaurus Před 3 lety +160

    You could genuinely not pay me enough to live in the USA! Nothing would convince me to live there.

    • @Nico.Robin7
      @Nico.Robin7 Před 3 lety +4

      Honestly same here 😭😭

    • @edithnaab5098
      @edithnaab5098 Před 3 lety +8

      same and i live here lol

    • @shasita3361
      @shasita3361 Před 3 lety +6

      My fiancé is from the US. He moved to the Netherlands a year ago, but still hasn't found a job. If he can't get a job soon, he's moving back. I don't want to move to the US... 😭

    • @Jprager
      @Jprager Před 3 lety +2

      @@edithnaab5098 the U.K. is just way to overcrowded, I couldn’t stand the cold wet weather. How do you visit the beach without actually swimming etc. There’d be no place to get could tacos or BBQ.

    • @sumaiyahn2152
      @sumaiyahn2152 Před 3 lety +2

      @@Jprager what we have tacos and bbq like and actually had a heat wave last summer like that is the most stereotypical thing to say

  • @extra1405
    @extra1405 Před 3 lety +165

    You missed the bit about welsh government bursaries.
    Scotland: Free
    England: Gov course + maintance loan (9%) & university bursaries (don't need to pay back)
    Wales: course loan + maintance loan (9%) + Maintance bursary (don’t need to pay back) & university bursaries (dont need to payback)
    *I'm from wales and my maintance is the same size as my English flat mates, plus I get 4k from government bursary and 1k from uni.
    I may not ever pay off my loan side of it, but its not something I really worry about as it will just go away.
    Might not be as lucky as the Scottish, but I feel quite secure and comfortable when at uni and don't really get worried by the money side of it.

    • @kieransawdust
      @kieransawdust Před 3 lety +4

      I still can't quite believe how quietly Welsh Gov took it up to £9K, I'm Welsh too and when I did my undergrad a few years ago it was only £3K a year

    • @Inucroft
      @Inucroft Před 3 lety +7

      @@kieransawdust Tution fees in Wales are dictated by England.
      Wales does not have the autonomy that Scotland or Northern ireland gets

    • @rebeccastevens7522
      @rebeccastevens7522 Před 3 lety +1

      I Was going to point this out too. I only payed 3k a year to study in England as I was Welsh. and also my maintence was like 80% grant rather than loan so my total owed is like nothing compared to my English friends.
      I Wasn't Aware They'd swapped back to full fees though?! That's awful....

    • @extra1405
      @extra1405 Před 3 lety

      I think it was around 2007 (ish - don't quote me on that) it went up to 9k? so I was too young at the time to understand any changes etc). I just try looking at the brighter side - I get a grant, chances are I will never pay my loan back and if this wasn't the case, I don't think I would be able to afford uni. (which I guess is kind of the point, I guess the system worked?) Would be an absolute dream to only need to pay £3k

    • @funkyfranx
      @funkyfranx Před 3 lety +2

      03germas Wales has its own Parliament, what are you talking about

  • @khsk
    @khsk Před 3 lety +2

    A clarification: in the USA, a PUBLIC loan (so from the government), if you die, the debt disappears. If you have a PRIVATE loan (not from the government), it sticks around until it's fully paid off. You're correct that if you file bankruptcy, it doesn't go away like other consumer debts.

  • @nanayaasworld
    @nanayaasworld Před 3 lety +2

    Evan there’s such a thing as the federal Pell Grant (max $5200) and in Virginia a state grant (~$8000) offered to very low income students. It’s offered every year and it’s based on the FAFSA. You don’t have to pay either of these back. In addition, your university can offer grants based on available donor funds. So its possible to go to school for free if your family has been consistently low income. Also an important point you missed is that in state tuition is cheaper because theoretically your family has paid taxes to the state for years and the state gives in-state university tax money so that’s why it’s subsidized for in state students.

  • @phoebecereal4108
    @phoebecereal4108 Před 3 lety +68

    So I'm moving to Edinburgh in two weeks to study at The University of Edinburgh and a lot of people automatically assume that I must be incredibly rich to study abroad. In reality, I'm paying the exact same tuition costs as in-state school, A THIRD of what my in-state costs for housing would be (and in state would stuff me in a bedroom the same size with 2 other people and take away my kitchen for that cost), only $300 for pretty much full coverage health care, and slightly higher travel costs twice a year. Overall, the highest costs I've had to pay are to the US government for visa-related things. I'm paying less than pretty much everyone I know.

    • @katiejones1845
      @katiejones1845 Před 3 lety +1

      Also starting at Edinburgh uni this year ✌🏼

    • @lottiedoyle1103
      @lottiedoyle1103 Před 3 lety +1

      Beautiful city ❤️ Enjoy!
      Im heading up there on Wednesday for a few days break, if I ever get the chance to move then that is where I'm heading!

    • @werosification
      @werosification Před 3 lety +11

      people will be really shocked when you tell them this. especially scottish/eu students (myself included, also at uoe) can't comprehend the cost of education in the us. i had a classmate who said that he would pay the same about of money at home so why not do the whole degree abroad.

    • @katiejones1845
      @katiejones1845 Před 3 lety +5

      werosification Most things American I can’t comprehend tbh

    • @werosification
      @werosification Před 3 lety +2

      @@katiejones1845 same lol

  • @jaquesadit3240
    @jaquesadit3240 Před 3 lety +85

    Imagine paying for tuition... couldn't be me
    *Bagpipes starts playing*

    • @HomebaseLHR
      @HomebaseLHR Před 3 lety +1

      Jaques à dit generously funded by the English taxpayer

    • @jaquesadit3240
      @jaquesadit3240 Před 3 lety +9

      @@HomebaseLHR Ok, where are all of you getting this information.... because I can't find a source
      I work with councils a lot, Cuts to education caused by the conservative government are what causes schools do be shut down and understaffed in Scotland. England doesn't do magically pay for everything bud

    • @thegoldminer7489
      @thegoldminer7489 Před 2 lety

      @@jaquesadit3240 you couldn’t afford it without England 😂

    • @jaquesadit3240
      @jaquesadit3240 Před 2 lety

      @@thegoldminer7489 Ha, it's funny that you think that....
      (Edit) read my above reply

  • @WriterGirl90
    @WriterGirl90 Před 2 lety +6

    For my second attempt at uni, I had to be put through as an independent student because they wanted to assess me off my birth dad’s income even though I’ve never lived with him. The Student Loans Company refused to assess me off my parents income. Then I had the problem that they claimed I didn’t earn enough to be classed as independent so I had to prove that I paid rent and bills from that lower wage. It really sucked and we had to get an MP involved to get them to actually take another look as my case

  • @thetheatricallinguist
    @thetheatricallinguist Před 3 lety +1

    The fact that it is after September 1998 reflects when tuition fees were brought into England. Before that, English students didn’t pay fees. The 2012 date reflects when the tuition jumped up from about £2k per year to £9k per year.
    The interest and threshold also changes depending on the plan. The interest for Plan 1 is 1.1% and you pay back 9% of anything over about £19k.
    The interest for Plan 2 is 5.6% and while you study and then changes every year. You pay back 9% of anything over about £26k.
    It then gets trickier if you have a Postgrad loan too (and PhD loans are paid back similarly, though I think tu get them through the uni rather than the government). Interest on Postgrad loans is 5.6% and you pay back 6% of anything over £21k.
    So in my family:
    My husband: went to uni before 1998, nothing to pay back.
    My sisters: went to uni before 2012, roughly about £15k to pay back on Plan 1.
    Me: went to uni after 2012 and did a masters: roughly £45k to pay back on Plan 2 and £11k to pay back as a Masters Loan.
    Corry is right that most people don’t have to think about t because it comes out just like a tax. However, if you are self-employed, like I am, you are responsible for making sure you have enough money to pay back after your tax return has been filed, just like your taxes. So I have a very complicated spreadsheet to make sure I know exactly what I have to pay back haha.

  • @milotj4866
    @milotj4866 Před 3 lety +82

    It feels like the UK and European governments in general act thinking about the people while in the US .... it's all about making that sweet cash.

    • @baronvonlimbourgh1716
      @baronvonlimbourgh1716 Před 2 lety +6

      In europe governments serve their citizens, in the usa goverment serves corperations.

  • @joeyj1036
    @joeyj1036 Před 3 lety +201

    I love the British system of student loans coming from an american

    • @Lewis.John007
      @Lewis.John007 Před 3 lety +10

      Thanks im British

    • @annaf2828
      @annaf2828 Před 3 lety +23

      Yes, I’m in high school and my college counselor talking to me and said “Honestly, I haven’t even paid off mine and I won’t until I am 38, so let’s look at these scholarships.”

    • @orana03
      @orana03 Před 3 lety +28

      Wait till you hear the European system, particularly Germany. Don't know the details as a Brit. But the German tuition fees are dirt cheap, like much less than the UK 9k.

    • @joeyj1036
      @joeyj1036 Před 3 lety +7

      orana03 isn’t Germany like 10 bucks for a transit pass and that’s it or something

    • @rowanbarker2576
      @rowanbarker2576 Před 3 lety

      @@orana03 it would've been free but you can see why it's not eh

  • @fluffy100
    @fluffy100 Před 3 lety +10

    "Our student loans just go away quietly" this is why I want to go to university

  • @williamangliss5063
    @williamangliss5063 Před 2 lety +5

    I've never had to take private loans for my education thankfully, but upon reading my federal student loan contract, if I die, my loans are immediately forgiven. I made sure that my parent would never have to pay for my student loans if something like my passing were to happen, as I come from a low income household

  • @TheGeographyWatch
    @TheGeographyWatch Před 3 lety +54

    9:25 I think it’s those dates because that was when there was a change in tuition fees. The raised tuition fee in England and Wales from £3000 to £9250 came into effect in September 2012. Hope that helps!

    • @evan
      @evan  Před 3 lety +9

      my man!

    • @TheGeographyWatch
      @TheGeographyWatch Před 3 lety +5

      Evan Edinger Lol, I’m a woman, but thanks anyway, Evan! 🤪

    • @Bastion90
      @Bastion90 Před 3 lety +3

      Yeah I was finishing my Master just as the new tuition fees came in, so my fees were about 3.5k per year (3 years) for my BA, and then about 4-4.5k for my MA. I was so glad to miss the price hike.

    • @queen_najjingo
      @queen_najjingo Před 3 lety +3

      Actually it rose to 9000 in 2012 and 9250 in 2017 i believe as on my final year of uni was the last time tuition was 9000 and that was 2016/17

    • @DJ-tr6nf
      @DJ-tr6nf Před 3 lety +1

      In Wales it's £9000 not £9250

  • @1010Lone
    @1010Lone Před 3 lety +36

    Oh my! The danish system would blow your mind. We get university for free apart from the fact that we have to pay for the books we use. On top of that, we get student benefits. Every student, no matter income gets this and its about 600 pounds a month. If we then need more money, we can apply for students loans that has an interest of 4% while we are studying but when we graduate and start paying it off it goes down to 1%. :)

    • @LinniC93
      @LinniC93 Před 3 lety +2

      Woah, 600 in benefits every month!? Lucky! In Norway we get a loan every month, and part of it gets turned into a stipend if you complete your courses/degree. Also, we don't get charged interest while we're still in uni, but interest starts rolling as soon as you graduate or stop receiving payments. You get a variable interest by default, and atm it's 1.4%

    • @1010Lone
      @1010Lone Před 3 lety

      @@LinniC93 So if you don't finish your education you have to pay it all back? So you can't change your mind and then switch to something else without having to pay it back?

    • @LinniC93
      @LinniC93 Před 3 lety

      @@1010Lone If you don't complete the degree you only get 25% converted to a stipend instead of the full 40%. But this rule about having to complete the degree is brand new, so not sure about changing your mind. But I imagine that if you "drop out" and start anew on a different degree that you'll have to pay back those 15% you'd otherwise get. I guess it's supposed to encourage people to complete their education 🤷‍♀️

    • @vallmorhoeas5347
      @vallmorhoeas5347 Před 3 lety +1

      It’s basically the same here in Sweden, apart from that the interest is currently 0,16%. :)

  • @samanthajoe4099
    @samanthajoe4099 Před 3 lety +3

    Yep. It was cheaper for me to do a study abroad semester from Texas to Bradford, England and so I did it and met my hubby and now live over here in England!! Best decision ever!

  • @bleakdoodles6384
    @bleakdoodles6384 Před 3 lety +6

    I am glad I live in Scotland in midlothian, honestly can imagine having to pay that much in loans for uni its insane

  • @harrynicholson7740
    @harrynicholson7740 Před 3 lety +38

    Big point was missed in this about Northern Ireland students who study in unis in Northern Ireland only pay about £4000 per year but everyone else from the UK and EU pay £9250. NI students get a reduced rate due to the troubles and encourage young people to go to higher education. The reason the EU students don’t get it is due to NI students being charged £9250 but instantly getting money from the government to reduce it to £4000

    • @HansVonMannschaft
      @HansVonMannschaft Před 3 lety

      That's probably still unlawful. At least it was when the UK was in the EU. Germany tried to introduce a road toll that only affected foreign vehicles. Everyone had to pay it, but Germans got it credited back by the government. The EU court ruled it unlawful.

  • @wombatpandaa9774
    @wombatpandaa9774 Před 3 lety +39

    I think bursory or however you spell it is more comparable to Pell Grant than a scholarship, because Pell Grant comes from the government and doesn't require any essays, just a FAFSA form.

    • @melyx6897
      @melyx6897 Před 2 lety

      I second that. I carefully strategized paying for school. And Pell grants as well as other "free money" options are what I used to get 2 associates degrees.

    • @keyboardsmash3983
      @keyboardsmash3983 Před 2 lety +1

      Problem with pell grant, is that it is still FAFSA-based so if your FAFSA indicates that you should be able to pay... then pell is not going to do much

    • @wombatpandaa9774
      @wombatpandaa9774 Před 2 lety

      @@keyboardsmash3983 yeah, that certainly could be a difference. I can't quite remember the nature of bursary as it was described though

    • @ashley3667
      @ashley3667 Před 2 lety

      I have to pay back Pell grants and the interest wasn't stopped or payments paused for covid 😅

  • @DreamsAreMakeBelieve
    @DreamsAreMakeBelieve Před 3 lety +10

    "If you're really poor, good" No this literally is the case, I get maximum maintenance loan and bursary because my household income is so low. Perks of being broke!! It's lit
    It's hardest for people not poor enough to get a big loan but not rich enough that their parents can cover them. So most of my friends had parents paying their rent completely and used maintenance loan for everything else, but tons of people's parents can't afford to help them, but since they're on slightly higher incomes than me aren't able to support themselves with just the loan/bursary if they get one.
    Other problem with the household income thing is how households are decided. Saw on TV that a girl's mum had her partner move in, suddenly his income counted and she wouldn't get enough loan to live for the rest of her course. Even though he wasn't her dad and hadn't even met her until she'd gone to uni, it was assumed he would be helping out. In fact I don't think he'd lived their in the tax year that was being assessed, but his income was still taken into account.
    It's also not explained very clearly that parents are expected to make up the difference (i.e. top up their kid's loan to the maximum out of their own pocket) and it's kinda ridiculous to assume they can - not sure other children, whether at uni or in school, come into the equation.
    This might be the longest yt comment I've ever written, I just have a weird obsession with knowing everything about SFE!!

    • @caitlin329
      @caitlin329 Před 2 lety

      It also doesn't take into account if it's one person or two with that income. So if you have one parent earning a certain amount, then you can lose more to tax than if it were split between two people, but that isn't taken into account.
      So you'd be better off with 2 parents earning 20k than one earning 40k.

  • @chloecumming4191
    @chloecumming4191 Před 3 lety +2

    I just graduated this year in Scotland and I learned more about how I pay back my student loan from this video than any of my own research 😂

  • @anirudha6235
    @anirudha6235 Před 3 lety +100

    In conclusion: don't go to America to study

  • @harleygagnon1893
    @harleygagnon1893 Před 3 lety +46

    This is why I'm going to community college for my first two years. It's significantly cheaper.

    • @evan
      @evan  Před 3 lety +39

      I went to community college my first 2 years
      And I had so many scholarships for it, I actually got PAID to go there for 2 years
      but 3 more years + INTEREST is... a lot

    • @julielovesmcr
      @julielovesmcr Před 3 lety +3

      Smart. Sometimes if your parents don't make a certain amount, federal aid can completely pay for community college.
      And Fed Loan has interest rates at zero right now/every loan is technically in forebareance until the end of the year.

    • @MrN0nex
      @MrN0nex Před 3 lety +2

      Or come to europe where its even cheaper :p Well aside from England apparently

  • @yaseminaydemir210
    @yaseminaydemir210 Před 3 lety +3

    Just wanted to add - I'm from Wales and going to uni in England and I found out there's a Welsh Learning Grant scheme which means up to £8100 of your maintenance grant is given as a bursary from the Welsh government. The rest you get as a normal student loan but I think this is great 😁

  • @naughtscrossstitches
    @naughtscrossstitches Před 3 lety +2

    This makes me really grateful to be in the Australian system. We are very similar to the UK, our degrees cost more though not sure if they do when you do the conversions. There is a tiered system for the cost so degrees like nursing and teaching and cheap but courses like architecture and doctors cost the most. I did teaching and I would pay in one semester for 4 courses what my sister would pay for one course out of 4! But we have a HECS system that when you get a job on the tax form you elect whether you have a loan and you have more tax taken out of your wage to allow for the fact you have to pay it back. Each year when you earn over 42,000 you have to pay back at 1% of your income and the more you earn the more you have to pay back. You have the debt until you die/pay it off but it is your debt alone so your dependents aren't slugged with it. It is fairly common for a lot of people to never pay it off as you have to earn enough to pay it off but it's just dealt with as part of your yearly tax so not a big deal. Though there are some rules they've put in place about living overseas as you do still have to pay it back in those circumstances.

  • @TychoCelchu
    @TychoCelchu Před 3 lety +11

    I went to university in London, in the early to mid-90s. At that time tuition was free, and you got a grant from the government for living costs. The grants were in the process of being reduced at the time, and student loans were being introduced. Prior to the reductions, I believe that the grant was about £3k. With it being the 90s, that money went further than it does today.

  • @JessLee1816
    @JessLee1816 Před 3 lety +57

    While it’s technically the “English and Welsh system” I think Wales falls somewhere in between Scotland and England tbh. It’s not free, but we get it cheaper no matter where we study in the UK, while the Scottish system only applies if you study in Scotland.
    When I started uni in 2015, the Welsh gov was paying £5,500/£9000 of my tuition fee, so I only had to pay £3,500, which they updated to an equal £4,500 split for my second and third year; I only have to ‘pay back’ £12,500 for 3 years of uni tuition while all my English flatmates had tuition fees of £27k (iirc, Wales opted to keep tuition at £9k instead of adding the extra £250)!
    Wales also still has a proper maintenance system, which the English government is severely lacking in lol - Welsh students receive a mixture of loans, which are repayable, and grants, which aren’t. The maintenance cover currently totals around £9k a year for everyone who is living away from parents, regardless of family income, meaning that the means testing applies to allocation of loan/grant within that figure, not the sum total. I believe it’s somewhere around £12k a year if you’re studying in London though bc it’s hella spenny to live there! Plus, we have the Welsh government partial loan cancellation - you make a £50 (that’s what I did anyway) payment on your loans, and a nice (up to) £1,500 wipes from your loan. That’s before any uni specific financial help as well, which varies greatly depending on where you study.

    • @Inucroft
      @Inucroft Před 3 lety

      *Cries as Welshman whom was living in England when I had to apply*
      At least I went when tution was only £3K...

    • @DreamsAreMakeBelieve
      @DreamsAreMakeBelieve Před 3 lety

      Partial loan cancellation is interesting, I'd never heard of that! England got rid of our maintenance grants a few years ago which sucks - I think the amount you get is more or less the same as when we had grants, but the whole thing "has" to be paid back now!

  • @PhoebeJones
    @PhoebeJones Před 3 lety

    This is the video I didn’t know I needed! Absolutely loved it!

  • @emaanadil2694
    @emaanadil2694 Před 2 lety

    I’m a first year at a university in Colorado and the way we have it is that the school requires first year’s (living on campus) to choose between a 15 meals/week + 200 dollars of “munch money” or 19 meals + 150 “munch money” that is included in first year tuition. The meal plans/munch money work in the school dining halls and markets but don’t work at the on campus restaurants such as Starbucks, Panda Express, subway, other random coffee shops/restaurants scattered throughout campus. For those we have to pay out of pocket which is rather unfortunate.
    For second year and up the meal plan is optional and in a block system, so for instance 50 meals per semester for a certain price. Without the meal plan most dining halls are 14ish dollars.

  • @eileenw8463
    @eileenw8463 Před 3 lety +6

    I like the yearly update letter with something like 'this isn't a request for money' in capital letters

  • @alltimebubble7837
    @alltimebubble7837 Před 3 lety +82

    Honestly I wish we worked like Scotland and had free university, it would be so much easier

    • @emmaw_5719
      @emmaw_5719 Před 3 lety +19

      AllTimeBubble Yep I live in Scotland and it’s way better than England, free uni and free prescriptions and so many more benefits

    • @jakewatson668
      @jakewatson668 Před 3 lety +16

      Tories don't want that though 🤷‍♂️

    • @ashweena8327
      @ashweena8327 Před 3 lety +21

      Tories aren't ready for that conversation
      😔🤟

    • @Max-by1zc
      @Max-by1zc Před 3 lety +3

      @@emmaw_5719 ye it's really good

    • @jaimewilliams5609
      @jaimewilliams5609 Před 3 lety +3

      I start first year in two weeks and honestly the process was so easy

  • @Josh_Day
    @Josh_Day Před 3 lety +5

    To do clear, federal student loans do NOT have to be paid back if the student dies. Private loans DO have to be paid back though, as they are just like any other loan from a bank

  • @ginganinja1548
    @ginganinja1548 Před 2 lety +1

    US citizen: Right out of college, I paid 750 a month and only earned about 1750 a month as a teacher. Plus I paid for rent, car loan, insurance, and daily living expenses. It was definitely a struggle those first few years until I started earning more money-- and eventually paid off my car loan. The struggle is definitely real in the US. Oh-- and I had a major surgery so medical bills on top of that... Not a fun time.

  • @darklordDevilish
    @darklordDevilish Před 3 lety +48

    There is also an advantage to being a "mature" student, if you're over 25, the only income they take into account for anything means tested, such as maintenance loans and grants, is you're own whilst you're studying and it doesn't include any income you'll get from any small part time jobs. So when I finally did my undergrad, I was able to put down a £0 household income, reduce my working hours to around 12hrs a week, which brought me in around £1000 a month and still get the full maintenance support from the government to make up for the lost earnings from reducing my hours which totalled about £4-6k over the course of the year (can't remember the exact figure, was a mixture of loan and grants). The maintenance loans get lumped in with the tuition loan so both will get wiped out for me 30 years from graduation, grants didn't require paying back. My university also did scholarships for students entering with over a certain amount (i think it was 250 or 300) UCAS points, which, at 420, I qualified, so I got about £1200 in my first year down to around £500 in my final year. I had to maintain a 2:1 average in each year to keep getting it in subsequent years though.

    • @anomalily
      @anomalily Před 3 lety +2

      Same is true in the US - if you're married or over the age of 24, ward of the state at age of 18, or have served in the military, you are considered independent and only your income counts.

    • @aprilsummers6447
      @aprilsummers6447 Před 3 lety +1

      I really don't think it's fair that a mature student could get more support than a student barely entering adulthood but that's just the system I suppose.

    • @anomalily
      @anomalily Před 3 lety

      April Summers the premise is that 18 year olds have family support. Obviously not always true, but in the US you can try to get independent student status if you aren’t in contact with them. At 25 I was independent and had lived 2000 miles from my parents for 8 years and got no money from them in that time. (Also being a 27 year old in college is HARD - can’t sleep deprive yourself in the same way)

    • @aprilsummers6447
      @aprilsummers6447 Před 3 lety

      @@anomalily yeah I get that. Being in school can be hard for anyone of any age. But I assume you don't need to be a mature student to apply for an independent student student. From what I'm gathering from darklord Devilish, in the UK, a mature student can get the max maintenance loan from student finance regardless whether their parents help out or not. Which if I'm being honest, I do question the fairness of that.

    • @anomalily
      @anomalily Před 3 lety

      @@aprilsummers6447 In the US, you get independent student status automatically if you are over the age of 24, have left the military, have a kid, are married, or are ward of the court (no parents) when you turn 18. It's then only based on your income, not your parents. Otherwise you have to petition that you're no-contact with your parents. You can just wait until you are 24 and work if you don't get support from your parents, that's what I did. It's actually quite fair as long as folks that don't have parental assistance CAN petition to prove that they don't get help from their parents.

  • @archimistry4454
    @archimistry4454 Před 3 lety +81

    I think you have to be earning a certain amount for the government to even begin to taking money to pay for the loans :)

    • @camdened123456
      @camdened123456 Před 3 lety +3

      You accrue interest from the day you start your course but you're correct.
      Repayments on Plan 1 start at around £16k (I'm plan 2 so I don't know the exact figure)
      Repayments on Plan 2 start at £25k

    • @lakishansivakumar6785
      @lakishansivakumar6785 Před 3 lety

      yea we have to earn 23k+ a year

    • @hamzaismail7296
      @hamzaismail7296 Před 3 lety +1

      9% for however much you earn above £25000 so if you earn £32000 a year they’d take 9% of 7000

  • @danielleeadie7124
    @danielleeadie7124 Před 3 lety +2

    Love these videos. I learn so much. I am very lucky to be Scottish. Four year bachelor degree was complete free and my post grad (Masters) was £5k.

  • @tim.a.k.mertens
    @tim.a.k.mertens Před 3 lety

    I love how dodie's cameo was just hands and a smile

  • @denisal2697
    @denisal2697 Před 3 lety +16

    I feel like the Scottish has changed a bit (I'm about to start uni):
    Tuition is free for anyone who has lived in Scotland for at least three years and you're not only there for that. Is paid by government.
    Maintanance is just around 5.5 grand, this has to be paid back.
    Maintanance bursary is means assessed and can go up to 2 grand.
    University bursary/scholarship depends on uni, is usually means assessed and doesn't have to be paid back. Eg. Edinburgh give you up to 3 grand per year of study.
    Sorry, if no one's interested, just thought I'd clarify it.

    • @jaydemorton9814
      @jaydemorton9814 Před 3 lety

      Yeah I just graduated in Scotland and we didn't really have the uni bursary/grant thing and the couple that we did have were super specific. So it was pretty much just SAAS.

  • @dazzledstrawberry
    @dazzledstrawberry Před 3 lety +10

    Wales and England was different when I went to uni. Because I was welsh my fees were capped at £3000 when English students had to pay up to £9000 even though I was at a English uni. But I think that's changed now.

  • @erinmcveigh4629
    @erinmcveigh4629 Před 3 lety +4

    The out of state tuition is so high supposedly because the students haven’t paid taxes for the state in which they are attending college.

  • @RoniRollin
    @RoniRollin Před 3 lety +2

    From the US and also got stuck with the fixed loans at 6.8%. Not sure it’s the same everywhere but there was also the option, I think depending on total household income, for subsidized or unsubsidized loans which wasn’t brought up. Mine were unsubsidized so the moment they were disbursed they started to collect interest regardless of if I was in school. In fact they don’t really show you the login information for the lone sites until graduation making it harder to pay off that accruing interest while in school. Which was annoying when I went to grad school and they automatically put your account in deferment which halts automatic payments.

  • @saskia7191
    @saskia7191 Před 3 lety +17

    In Belgium, almost nobody takes out a loan. Most people with a low income houshold get a bursary from the government and university is pretty cheap. Tuition is now around 980 euros a year. You will only need your books and maybe some tools/materials for some courses. Most students can earn enough with studentjobs/studentwork in the weekends or/and in the vacationperiods. If you want to take out a loan, you have to go to a private firm (mostly banks). Only people that live in Brussels or in Wallonia can get a loan from the government, not the people from Flanders.

    • @lucabralia5125
      @lucabralia5125 Před 3 lety +1

      yes, also in Italy it's pretty similar, even people with pretty low incomes can go to university, the most high cost universities are private and cost about 9000 €

  • @cluelessbecks1268
    @cluelessbecks1268 Před 3 lety +47

    I’m Scottish going to uni this year, my tuition fee is £1,800 paid by the government (don’t pay back). I get a 2K bursary(again don’t pay back) and 5k student loan.

    • @siobhanmartin6014
      @siobhanmartin6014 Před 3 lety +2

      I'm Scottish and the same figures too. I was having anxiety with Evan getting information about a mostly English situation. Scotland is different 🙈

    • @lakishansivakumar6785
      @lakishansivakumar6785 Před 3 lety

      bro what😭 i’m going uni this year (in england) and also 5k student loan and 9k tuition loan😭 and i still have to work to pay for my accommodations😭

    • @cluelessbecks1268
      @cluelessbecks1268 Před 3 lety

      Lakishan Sivakumar omg that's so fucking harsh omg, 7k loan and bursary covers me well for the year, England is fuckeddddd

    • @spencerwilton5831
      @spencerwilton5831 Před 3 lety

      Clueless Becks The only reason it's so much cheaper in Scotland is because English taxpayers subsidise Scotland. We spend more per person on the Scottish than we do on our own citizens. Hundreds of millions of pounds every year. That's why Scottish independence is such a joke- they would be screwed if that money suddenly dried up. The sooner it happens the better.

    • @lakishansivakumar6785
      @lakishansivakumar6785 Před 3 lety

      Clueless Becks yea you lot have it better but what the other person said is also correct ahah, i start uni in a week😭

  • @frglee
    @frglee Před 3 lety +4

    I went to an English uni in the 70s for my degree and post-graduate teaching qualification. It took 4 years. There were no tuition charges and I got a maintenance grant to live off, equivalent to over £12K a year nowadays. None of this had to be paid back. Odd how the state could afford free degree education for students then, but not now.

    • @samsara3694
      @samsara3694 Před 2 lety +2

      Not odd at all. In the 70s, up to 7% of the population went to uni. In fact, only around 15% even stayed on to do A levels. Instead, the overwhelming majority of the population went into work and began paying in taxes at 16, a full five years earlier than today, when nearly 50% of student stay in education until at least 21.

  • @jtjc7705
    @jtjc7705 Před 3 lety +2

    That was the most perfect TLDR statement on US student loans ever. Sums up the whole entrapment system nicely:
    "In the US.. you do sign up for this dream of 'you'll make a lot more money and you can have a new life in the new land of having a college degree', and there's no actual way of possibly paying it back for most 90% of people. So therefore, you're kind of working endlessly to pay back this interest growing loan that will never go away".
    You literally become a cash flow for the company.

  • @literaltrashpigeon5570
    @literaltrashpigeon5570 Před 3 lety +18

    I'm an American, perm settled in Edinburgh, with those lovely, lovely US Fed loans. I did not know about this IRS Tax bomb, so thanks for the heads up. Ah, America, you evil, greedy thing.

  • @natjohns8015
    @natjohns8015 Před 3 lety +36

    I'm on my second year of uni in England and I think for 3 years overall my debt will be roughly £45000. I only have to pay back a small percentage over the threshold and I dont pay any back for 2 years after graduating anyway, i do believe. I've always been so grateful that I live in England and can get this kind of debt and not the American version. The idea of the tax bomb is insane. 😲

    • @Jess140594
      @Jess140594 Před 3 lety

      You’re lucky! I graduated in 2016 and got the minimum maintenance loan alongside my tuition fee and when I got my letter from SF through once I graduated, it said I owe £53k! I’ll probably never earn enough to start paying it back anyway, I want to be a funeral director and they don’t earn near the minimum earning to pay it back

    • @tensemurm5924
      @tensemurm5924 Před 3 lety +3

      @@Jess140594 That's what's so great about our loan system.
      You did a degree and ended up earning a good amount of money (currently above £26,575 - barely below the average income for UK adults)? Pay a fixed percentage towards your student fees! If you earn the average income, you pay around £30 per month!
      You did a degree, but your income is still relatively low? No worries, don't pay anything unless your salary goes up a good amount.
      Our universities are expensive on paper, but only needing to pay back what we can afford is brilliant

    • @lordshadow3822
      @lordshadow3822 Před 3 lety

      Ouch wait I'm guessing it's £9000 not £3400 a year lol

    • @natjohns8015
      @natjohns8015 Před 3 lety

      @@lordshadow3822 I believe its £3400 for Welsh students in wales

    • @lordshadow3822
      @lordshadow3822 Před 3 lety

      @@natjohns8015 yeah. It was £3400 when i went to uni (in England) back in 2008/2009

  • @johnleake5657
    @johnleake5657 Před 2 lety

    You wondered about 1st September 1998? That's when tuition fees were introduced. Before that, there was a student loan (from 1990-91) and when I started in 1994, there was still a maintainance grant for some students (the government paid your cost of living, and mature students like me got reasonable provision) and you could take out a loan for further costs.

  • @Holdeenio
    @Holdeenio Před 3 lety +3

    My mind is blown! I knew the system in American was harsh, but this was very illuminating. In these cases, if it is widely known how you'd be saddled if you did choose to go out of state for university, why do people still do it? It sounds like a perpetual struggle

    • @kamilareeder1493
      @kamilareeder1493 Před 10 měsíci

      There is also a lot of predatory counciling when it comes to education. They will make you feel like its your only option
      You have to make these choices at 17 years old, you only get one shot unless your family has money, and most people have no concept of this kind of loan amount at that age. 🤷‍♂️