Standard Life Reveals University Debt Headache For Parents
Released on: August 23, 2011, 3:13 am
Author:
Standard Life
Industry:
Financial
Standard Life has revealed that more than half of parents
potentially underestimate the maximum amount of debt their child could
leave university with.
When asked to take into account the increase in tuition fees to a maximum of £9,000
per year from 2012, and any other debts accumulated from living expenses, student
loans, bank loans etc. 58 per cent of parents think the maximum debt their children
could leave with is £40,000 or under, including many who think this would be a lot
less. This total is well under the maximum figure of £54,000 calculated by the
long-term savings and investment company Standard Life.
Despite this, a fifth (21 per cent) of parents have started to make regular savings
to help ease the costs of their children's university education, and nearly a
quarter (23 per cent) of parents are putting money aside on special occasions (e.g.
birthdays or one-off windfalls).
Julie Hutchison, head of technical insight at Standard Life, said: "The findings of
our research are positive as they show that parents have identified the need to save
for their children's time at university. Unfortunately their expectations of what
that cost could be and therefore the target amount they want to save might actually
be too low."
Parents who have longer to save are taking full advantage, as more than half of
parents (55 per cent) with children aged 0 to 9 are putting money aside for their
child's university costs. Conversely seven out of ten (70 per cent) parents with
children aged 14 to 17 aren't doing the same.
Julie continued: "Attending University is of course a worthwhile pursuit but can be
expensive with the costs of tuition fees, living costs and course material all
adding up over the years. Even though a student loan can be taken to cover all these
outgoings, parents can also seriously help reduce these costs."
More than half (53 per cent) of parents who save on a regular basis are saving less
than £50 a month towards their child's university costs, 27% are saving £50 - £100,
7 per cent are saving £101 - £200 and 4 per cent of parents are saving more than £200.
Out of the 56 per cent of parents who are not saving for their children's
university costs, almost two-thirds (63 per cent) say they can’t afford to at the
moment, with one in ten (10 per cent) having just not considered it.
The research also looked at the saving attitudes of grandparents of children under
18, with one in ten (9 per cent) saving for their grandchildren's university
education on a regular basis, 16 per cent on occasions and 2 per cent as a one-off
lump sum. Of those not saving, a quarter (24 per cent) have just not considered it,
with 15 per cent thinking the child's parents are saving up sufficient funds.
Regionally parents in the Midlands are saving the most with 52 per cent putting
money aside for their children's university costs. It's followed by London (48 per
cent), Scotland (44 per cent), Southern England and East of England (both 42 per
cent) with the North of England saving the least (39 per cent).
- Ends -
About Standard Life:
Standard Life is a leading long term savings and investments company headquartered
in Edinburgh and operating internationally. Established in 1825, Standard Life
provides life assurance, annuities, life insurance, savings products such as stock
and shares ISAs,
investment bonds, tax efficiencies, pension
products, financial planning and investment management to around 6 million customers worldwide.
For further information, please contact:
Matthew Pittam
Standard Life plc
Ground Floor
Caledonian Exchange
19a Canning Street
Edinburgh
EH3 8EG
0131 245 4961
www.standardlife.co.uk
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