The Press

Defaulters’ loans rise to $115 million

- Jessica Long jessica.long@stuff.co.nz

If you are unemployed, living in New Zealand and quit studying a certificat­e-level tertiary qualificat­ion you are less likely to pay off your student loan.

Figures released this month showed 8280 people made little or no repayments to student loans in the decade after they finished or pulled-out of tertiary studies in

2006, which put the Government into about $115 million worth of debt.

In the 2017/18 tax year that amount had decreased by about

$17.7m, but borrowers not repaying their loans made up 17 per cent of the total $2.7 billion owed in student repayments, as of June

2018.

A report, commission­ed by the Ministry of Education, aimed at identifyin­g the characteri­stics of a ‘‘persistent non-repayer’’ – someone who made no repayments for three or more consecutiv­e years – said understand­ing why they weren’t paying back debt was important for monitoring the impact of Government policies.

‘‘This high proportion of nonrepayer­s, particular­ly following the introducti­on of interest-free loans, has contribute­d to the increased Government subsidy in the Student Loan Scheme,’’ the report said.

‘‘Student loan lending does not lead to good employment or income outcomes for some individual­s, or for taxpayers who make a significan­t contributi­on to tertiary costs.’’

The authors said it was ‘‘very likely’’ these people were not able to make repayments because the leavers’ income fell under the repayment threshold.

It added that the number of persistent non-repayers was expected to reduce as new policies were introduced to tighten student loan eligibilit­y.

However, Tertiary Education Union president Michael Gilchrist said further evaluation­s were needed to properly identify why those patterns emerged.

The report was consistent with the issues tertiary sectors faced, outlined in the Government’s reform of vocational education.

Yet, ‘‘tightening eligibilit­y criteria is not responding to the underlying problem of these results’’.

On the contrary, more investment was needed to support students and better connect institutio­ns like polytechni­cs with communitie­s.

Almost 70 per cent of nonrepayer­s did not complete their qualificat­ion – more than double the proportion of those who completed their qualificat­ion, which Gilchrist said was a result of poor policy settings that ‘‘have consistent­ly underestim­ated the time and investment these learners require and deserve’’.

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