Do the math, once graduated, if they work 40 hours a week on minimum wage, the extra cost per day of repayments is less than 50c. It's such a hardship paying back money that you borrow that attracts nil $#@!ing interest.
Please change thread title to 'Bloody Art Students' they are the problem. :3
What is a bit silly, I think, is that they removed the voluntary repayment bonus. Which takes aways the only incentive to actually pay any more then the minimum amount.
The goverment should instead give incentives to areas that need more students and remove incentives for areas that don't.aka: If you go study Engineering/IT/Doctors/Nurses etc, then your loan is interest free. If you study Commerce/Law/Arts etc then your loan is not interest free.This would get people studying and filling jobs in areas that actually need them, thus the Goverment getting their money back quicker, instead of this blanket increase in repayment rate.
NZUSA President, Pete Hodkinson said students felt "targeted" by the Budget."What is not fair and reasonable, and what this government doesn't want to accept is that the loan repayment threshold kicks in below the poverty line for our graduates who shouldn't be forced into paying for the 'private benefit of education', before that benefit is realised," Hodkinson said.
I currently pay $79/week to student loan.How much will I now have to pay following this budget?That is all.
just going to add in here - it took me 4 years (in total) working minimum wage jobs before I got my foot in the door of IT and was able to get a decent Salary and then to move from the position I was in to the company I am at now - I had to do a fair amount of personal education in my own time to bring my skills up to the point where I could ask for the higher salaryThat was with no tertiary education.if you come out of uni with a degree - you still have to do the 3-4 years of hard grind in crappy bottom rung jobs before you have the experiance necessary to start commanding a decent pay packet. Also it helps if you do stuff in your own time and claim it as experiance - maybe you have finished a graphic design course, well do some freebies or mates rates jobs for friends/family business and put it on your CV.Work experiance people.
Early Childhood Teaching requires tertiary education to become an accredited teacher, and now it will require post-grad study which is now no longer covered by the SL scheme.
Industries work differently from each other. IT is probably one of the few industries that will allow it's inhabitants to climb the ranks on experience alone. I don't think the financial sector would want many people working in it if they weren't accredited, same goes for the medical industries. Some sectors just have too much theoretical practice involved that force you to go through tertiary education. Early Childhood Teaching requires tertiary education to become an accredited teacher, and now it will require post-grad study which is now no longer covered by the SL scheme.Also, if you plan to work internationally, having an international qualification is going to mean a fuck load more than experience with a few places that have no bearing on an international stage.Experience doesn't always = more money. Certain areas within industries have capped salaries.
Took me 5 years to study BDes Hons. Now working 3 shit jobs paying back student loan of 60kish @ $29 per week. Half my wages go to Fuel so I can actually get to my fucking jobs. At this rate I'll be middleaged before its paid it off.One of my classmates flew to Sydney 2 days after graduation last week, was instantly offered a job in Product Advertising @ AU$60k+ per yearI was invited to do my Masters, I guess thats out the window.EDIT: I work 6.5 days a week :S
I think you missed the wood for the Tree - certainly in the finance sector you need accreditation, but just being accredited alone is not going to land you a sweet job raking in a 60K + Income, thats where you need the experiance.Same with being a Lawyer, a good friend of mine who passed is bar exam, spent 2-3 years as a clerk before finallying becoming a full fledged lawyer - again gaining expierance at a lower rung.my point is that students who complain about there not being any jobs or jobs that don't pay well tend to forget that while they have a nice qualification, their lack of experiance means they are going to do some hard graft for a few years before being able to get those nice fat salaries