Kippers
or red herrings?
Released on
= June 10, 2005, 8:13 am
Press Release
Author = Rachel Lane / Cashzilla
Industry = Financial
Press Release
Summary = Is anyone else fed up of hearing about the UK property
market? Renting - why it's worth some extra credit.
Press Release
Body = Recent news has made much of parents stretching their finances
to cover costs for their twenty and thirty something children. Debts
and high property prices have forced many offspring to return home,
tail between legs, under
the attractive new marketing term of “kippers”: kids
in parents’ pockets eroding retirement savings.
Many graduates
have developed significant debts from university and have accumulated
further debt in the competitive graduate market. Student life provides
an incubated protection from the reality of financial concerns and
fresher fairs become increasingly populated by banks, mobile phone
companies and other brands wishing to tap into the students’
borrowed finances.
It is true that
many young people have got themselves into very uncomfortable financial
positions because of careless spending. The ethics of student finance
are somewhat dubious with many financial products branded “student”,
not necessarily
offering the best deal. Most shops, bars, cafés and restaurants
on university campuses are fully commercial enterprises designed
to make profit, without wanting to fit around a student’s
pocket. Tuition fees, whilst significant, are not the
biggest problem for students.
Most students
run up debts because of inadequate life skills. They’re not
used to doing their own washing, they don’t sew, some can’t
cook and most have never been in charge of their own finances prior
to university. If it’s broke, just buy a new
one. One male student reported preferring to buy take-away food,
rather than cook his own food, also often buying new shirts to save
washing and ironing old ones. An American exchange student, who
had never been taught to do her own cooking, used some of her $90,000
loan to live on take-ways, convenience meals and restaurant food
whilst studying in London.
If 16-18 year
olds were forced to take a gap year before university and undertake
a period of community work and life skills training, it is unlikely
that they would graduate with the same level of debt. Just like
binge drinking, smoking in public
places and increasing levels of obesity, debt accumulation is part
of a distorted value system. The kids deserve some of the blame,
though the government also needs to take an interest. There is no
reason, even with tuition fees, why even the
poorest students cannot go to university, but expectations of a
suitable standard of living have to be lowered, with a genuine concern
for a suitable standard of education at the heart of the matter.
To get the best
deal on financial products:
http://www.moneynet.co.uk/
Information
on student finance:
http://www.creditaction.org.uk/documents/StudentsSample.pdf
Citizens Advice
Bureau
http://www.adviceguide.org.uk/
Web Site = http://www.cashzilla.co.uk/
Contact Details
= Contact rachel@positiveinterest.com or visit
http://www.cashzilla.co.uk/
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