The Daily Telegraph - Features

Starmer & the Barbarians’ policy will ruin both private and state education

- Allison Pearson

I don’t expect Sir Keir Starmer (Reigate Grammar School before it went private) is losing much sleep over the fact that Labour’s policy of slapping 20 per cent VAT on school fees is predicted to cause a stampede of children towards selective schools like the one he was lucky enough to attend. The policy may be vengeful, stupid and counterpro­ductive, as well as deeply damaging to young people, of course, but, hey, at least it gives Starmer some red meat to chuck at the ravening class warriors on his party’s Left.

There is already an arms race in tutors to prepare kids for the 11-plus. Joe Hytner, of Titanium Tutors, reports that, since September, there has been a “huge surge” in demand for coaching as parents move to save money on private-school costs by getting their offspring into grammar schools.

Alice, a much in-demand private tutor, tells me that frantic parents are asking her to take on younger and younger children. Not long ago, she was summoned to a grand house in London where she was shown into a palatial salon. An immaculate woman was sitting there with her son. The mother told Alice she’d like her to start preparing Eugene to get into a grammar, one of the highestach­ieving schools in the country.

“He’s still very little,” protested Alice meekly.

“He’s three,” replied the Tiger Mum firmly.

Okay, that may be peak Ambitious Parent Insanity, but there is no doubt that the wealthiest parents are already buying up the best tutors for little Eugene and Hermione in order to game the system. Grammar schools were once the greatest engines of social mobility our country has ever seen. People like my mother and father, who grew up on council estates, had access to first-class teaching and an environmen­t where it was positively encouraged to work hard and go on to university.

One grossly unfair side effect of VAT on private school fees will be that the intensivel­y-tutored, possibly less able, children who would otherwise have gone into the independen­t sector, will likely do better in the 11-plus than those kids whose families can’t pick up a tutoring bill of several thousand pounds. Grammars will become free private schools for the wealthy.

“There is less pressure tutoring the kids whose parents can afford to go private anyway,” says Alice. “They’d like to save the money if they can, but it’s no biggie if the child fails because they’ve got them a private place.” The really stressful assignment­s, she says, are with youngsters for whom success in the 11-plus means the difference between getting a top-notch academic education and going to the local sink comprehens­ive.

Even well-off parents are going to be a lot less laid-back about kids failing the 11-plus if fees go up by a fifth. And the ones who are already struggling to afford private school simply won’t be able to make ends meet. Average annual fees for a UK day school of £16,656 per year would rise to nearly £20,000 if VAT was added in full.

One headteache­r at a small, well-loved private school (profits: five per cent annually) tells me that some mums and dads make incredible sacrifices, even restrictin­g themselves to only one child in order to be able to educate them privately. That may sound extreme, but in certain parts of the UK there is a vast, life-changing difference between private and state schooling.

A friend, whose son, Harry, was profoundly dyslexic managed to get him a part-council-funded place at a fee-paying school where dedicated, one-on-one attention saw the boy learn to read and write really well. Harry is now at Exeter University. Harry’s friend, also deeply dyslexic, stayed at the village junior school, got neither diagnosis nor special help, and later dropped out of a huge comprehens­ive aged 15.

Lazy stereotype­s about independen­t schools abound. Not all are Eton or Westminste­r. Many less-cushioned private schools specialise in youngsters with special needs. “They have probably come from state schools as anxious and needy children,” says the headteache­r. “They are particular­ly vulnerable to change and so to have to disrupt their education [by returning them to the state sector] is particular­ly problemati­c.”

The Labour Party breezily says independen­t schools should absorb the tax increase, but that will inevitably mean making harsh cuts. Bursaries and scholarshi­ps for brilliant brains and athletical­ly gifted kids from poorer homes will be under pressure. Our independen­t schools have a hugely important role to play in developing excellence in sport, music and the arts. When the great Welsh player J P R Williams died recently, obituaries noted he had won a scholarshi­p to Millfield. That remarkable breeding ground for athletes now offers the Sir Gareth Edwards Scholarshi­p for new rugby talent, named for one of JPR’s legendary Welsh team-mates who was himself forged as a champion at the same school.

How many of our Olympians and Bafta-winners hailed from independen­t schools? Plenty of them will have been on bursaries. The British rowing eight in the forthcomin­g Paris games would be almost empty if you lost the privatesch­ool kids. So would the men’s and women’s hockey XIs. Talk about killing the golden goose.

Tragically, Labour’s vandalism could also make some subjects extinct. Classics, modern languages and physics are, to a large extent, kept going by independen­t schools.

And what about the staffing crisis this vindictive legislatio­n will cause? Starmer & the Barbarians should not assume there won’t be teacher shortages as thousands of private-school refugees flood in.

Then there’s the rank hypocrisy of it all. No suggestion of VAT on university fees or private tutoring – how do they differ from paying for private education? .

Will overseas students at independen­t schools – there are a lot of them – have to pay VAT or will they be able to claim it back? In which case, Labour would specifical­ly be penalising British children. And where exactly does this leave so-called Army brats? For many in the military, day state schools are not an option and they certainly won’t be able to cough up an extra 20 per cent out of the pitifully modest salary our shortsight­ed Government gives them.

Oh, well done! Top marks to Sir Keir & the Barbarians for a policy which looks poised to cause havoc in our education system.

Britain excels at private education; it is one of our top exports, bringing in thousands of satisfied, fee-paying customers as well as providing a matchless, challengin­g grounding for seven per cent of British children which keeps us competitiv­e with the best in the world. It takes so much pressure off the state system that parents should get tax relief, not a tax increase! You would have to be stark staring bonkers to interfere with independen­t schools. Or maybe blinded by class hatred. Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to Starmer’s Britain.

Independen­t schools take so much pressure off the state, parents should get tax relief, not an increase

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