
IFS Zooms In: The Economy Are Plan 2 student loans 'unfair'?
Feb 12, 2026
Kate Ogden, IFS economist who explains student finance mechanics, and Nick Hillman, HE policy director and former adviser, debate Plan 2 loans. They unpack income-contingent repayments, RPI+3% interest, write-offs, how plans differ across the UK, cohort changes and political choices. Short, clear conversations on who pays and why the system feels like a tax to many.
AI Snips
Chapters
Transcript
Episode notes
Income-Contingent Loans Act Like Insurance
- UK student loans became income-contingent to protect graduates with low earnings and provide insurance against poor labour-market outcomes.
- This design makes many loans behave like a graduate tax rather than a conventional repay-in-full loan.
Key Design Of Plan 2 Explained
- Plan 2 (from 2012) set a repayment threshold, RPI+3% interest while studying, and 30-year write-off, creating built-in redistribution and insurance.
- These terms mean many lower earners won't fully repay, making the system partly a graduate tax.
Interest Rate Chosen For Redistribution And Politics
- The RPI+3% real interest was chosen partly to introduce modest redistribution and cover insurance costs, not purely to eliminate subsidy.
- Political constraints and accounting rules also shaped the design choices in 2010–12.
