Does Student Loan Debt Structure Young People’s Housing Tenure? Evidence from England

Author:

DE GAYARDON ARIANEORCID,CALLENDER CLAIREORCID,DESJARDINS STEPHEN L.

Abstract

Abstract This article analyses the interaction between two policy areas affecting young people in England – housing and student funding. It is the first of its kind exploring a range of dynamics in the relationship between housing and student loan debt. Young people today are far less likely to own their home and are more likely to live with their parents than earlier generations. In parallel, higher education tuition fee increases have led to a growing share of students taking out loans and graduating with higher debt, which they will be repaying for most of their working lives. This research examines the relationship between student loans – having borrowed for higher education and attitudes towards debt – and housing tenure at age 25, using the Next Steps dataset. We find that young graduates who did not borrow for higher education are more likely to own their home and less likely to rent or live with their parents than graduates who borrowed for their studies or young people who never attended higher education. These results suggest that higher education funding policies and student loan debt play important roles in structuring young people’s housing in England.

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)

Subject

Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Public Administration,Social Sciences (miscellaneous)

Reference57 articles.

1. Ministry of Housing, Communities & Local Government (2020), ‘English Housing Survey: Headline report, 2018-19’, London: Author, https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/860076/2018-19_EHS_Headline_Report.pdf [accessed 05.05.2020].

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3. Cribb, J. , Hood, A. and Hoyle, J. (2018), ‘The decline of homeownership among young adults’ (IFS Briefing Note No. BN224), London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, https://www.ifs.org.uk/uploads/publications/bns/BN224.pdf [accessed 19.11.2019].

4. Student Loans and Homeownership

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