andrewducker (
andrewducker) wrote2005-04-27 08:02 pm
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Huzzah!
In 1990 I went to university - part of the first year to have student loans rather than full grants.
I just got the letter from the student loan company telling me the last of them has been paid off.
Slowly I rid myself of all my debts...
I just got the letter from the student loan company telling me the last of them has been paid off.
Slowly I rid myself of all my debts...
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My brother was the last year that got any grant at all, and that wasn't a huge amount but it helped him a lot.
I currently have three full year loans over my head and the prospect of another three. That's going to take me the rest of my life to pay off, I imagine.
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It's now worth about a tenner, but I still owe the students loan people more than enough money to buy a really nice laptop....
I have to admit I'm working on the basis that unless my earnings substantially increase I won't have to pay it off, as at the present rate of increase of the gross amount you can earn I've still got quite a way to go before they'll catch up with me.
I also believe the life time of the loan is 25 years, or age 50 - whichever comes first. That should mean I've only 14 years left to go...
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If full funding/ grants was brought back by whomever gets in after May 5th, I'd probably go back to university...
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xx
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I wanted to do an MA....
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Of course, if you are already doing this then my advice doesn't help.
In them days you got your tuition fees paid - I couldn't have afforded it nowadays, nor could my parents (We were right on the edge for getting a grant, got £800 one year nothing the rest, lived on my summer job money).
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Curious about the timing: Britain and Australia both abandoned free higher education at about the same time. Presumably coincidental?
Congratulations on clearing the debt, BTW; it is a wonderful feeling to be free of yet another obligation to a financial institution... and the interest repayments.
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How are you anyway not spoken to you on msn for aaages
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I'm going to be doing an art course, so when I come out I'm going to be skint for several years afterwards because I want to have my own studio if I possibly can, which will probably involve renting a fairly large place to make my own stuff. The materials for my chosen profession won't be cheap, and I probably won't break even for a long time. After that I won't be rich by any means and so I'll be paying off at a low rate (if at all) for a long, long time.
I really don't expect to pay off that much debt until I'm pretty old, possibly not until retirement age. I'm not being unrealistic, I just know that being an artist means being skint for most of the time, even if I do go into teaching or something part time.
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Am ok - just been a bit hectic recently!