The cost of living crisis is placing nearly 300,000 UK students in financial peril, with a disproportionate number of older, working-class or Black students likely to drop out, according to analysis by a university group.
The MillionPlus group – an association of modern universities in England and Scotland educating more than a million students – said national governments and regulators including the Office for Students (OfS) and the Scottish Funding Council should take immediate action to alleviate the severe financial pressures facing students.
Rachel Hewitt, chief executive of MillionPlus, said: “We must challenge the narrative that all students are 18-year-olds and are able to rely on parental support – increasingly, with household budgets being squeezed, this is not a lived reality.
“For mature students, those who are from low participation areas, first-in-family or commuter students, the cost of living crisis seriously risks forcing them out of higher education and damaging their future prospects.”
The MillionPlus research identifies more than 300,000 undergraduates across the UK who will be hardest hit financially in the coming academic year because of rising costs of food, transport, rent and energy.
“These students are more likely to belong to groups traditionally underrepresented in higher education. Black and mature students are the two groups most at-risk of immediate financial hardship,” it stated.
The largest at-risk groups include 44,000 mature students aged over 25, along with up to 43,000 Black students and about 50,000 students from working-class backgrounds. Additionally, up to 68,000 “commuter students” who live off campus are expected to face financial difficulties.
“Given the close links between thoughts
Read more on theguardian.com