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Student rent support plan from Welsh Conservatives | Student rent support plan from Welsh Conservatives |
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Radical plans to scrap tuition fee subsidies and pay half of students' rent instead have been announced by the Welsh Conservatives. | Radical plans to scrap tuition fee subsidies and pay half of students' rent instead have been announced by the Welsh Conservatives. |
Students from Wales currently pay only £3,810 towards their fees wherever they study in the UK. | Students from Wales currently pay only £3,810 towards their fees wherever they study in the UK. |
The Welsh government pays up to £5,190 on top of that, which the Tories claim is "unsustainable" at an annual cost of £229m. | |
The party said its £75m-a-year plans help with living costs and were fairer. | The party said its £75m-a-year plans help with living costs and were fairer. |
Their argument is accommodation costs often take a chunk out of a student's maintenance loan and the plan would help free up funds for their education. | Their argument is accommodation costs often take a chunk out of a student's maintenance loan and the plan would help free up funds for their education. |
'Potentially prohibitive' | |
Welsh Conservative leader Andrew RT Davies said higher education funding in Wales needed a "radical shake-up". | |
"Welsh Conservatives are the only party proposing a radical new approach which offers students the support they need with potentially prohibitive living costs," he said. | |
"Accommodation costs often swallow up maintenance loans, meaning students - and their parents - often struggle with everyday living costs associated with university life. | "Accommodation costs often swallow up maintenance loans, meaning students - and their parents - often struggle with everyday living costs associated with university life. |
"We want to change that - offering students timely, urgent support that will improve the accessibility of education; simultaneously ending Labour's unsustainable tuition fee grant." | "We want to change that - offering students timely, urgent support that will improve the accessibility of education; simultaneously ending Labour's unsustainable tuition fee grant." |
The Tories said average rental costs in Wales for students were around £118 a week, meaning the average student would receive £59 a week in rent subsidy. | The Tories said average rental costs in Wales for students were around £118 a week, meaning the average student would receive £59 a week in rent subsidy. |
The money would be paid wherever in a UK the student chooses to go to university. | The money would be paid wherever in a UK the student chooses to go to university. |
'Reward landlords' | |
Education Minister Huw Lewis has suggested Labour would continue to subsidise tuition fees if the party won the election in May, but hinted the subsidies may be means-tested. | |
Responding to the Conservative plan, he said Labour was "proud" of a policy which he said had protected thousands of Welsh students, facing on average £22,000 less debt compared to graduates in England. | |
Plaid Cymru said it would shift to a system where graduates who work in Wales would get £6,000 a year of their tuition fee debts written off. | |
Education spokesman Simon Thomas claimed the Tory plan would push up rents and buy-to-let house prices in university towns and cities. | |
"While Plaid Cymru will reward students for working in Wales after graduation, the Tories will reward landlords for being lucky enough to own property to let out," he said. | |
The Welsh Liberal Democrats have said they would replace tuition fee subsidies with maintenance grants for students and more direct help for cash-strapped universities. |