Picture a scene of a young person hunched over a laptop, clicking “accept” on a student loan valued at more money than they have ever seen on a screen, let alone the money within their bank account. Currently in Westminster, this moment is rarely framed as a high‑stakes investment decision. Instead, the student finance narrative only focused on “support” and “controlling costs”, casting students as short‑term dependents and their loans as a line item on the Treasury’s balance sheet.
In economic terms, though, that same signature is a leveraged bet on future earnings as an investment in human capital that underpins the UK’s long‑run growth, productivity and tax base. When politicians misread this as consumption spending rather than something closer to Research and Development (R&D), they design policies that load risk and uncertainty onto young people while under-investing in skills at the national level. The result of this is a system that looks fiscally tidy in the short term but leaves graduates carrying volatile, often opaque liabilities well into their future livelihoods.
Right now, students are talked about less as investors in their own future and more as a cost to be managed. The conversation during debates fixate on thresholds, interest rates and write‑off horizons because these parameters shape write‑offs and the value of the loan book, which excludes the importance of helping individuals make good decisions about their lives. Almost none of this conversation treats the decision to study as a leveraged bet or questions whether the risk split between state and student is efficient for the wider economy. Students are rendered as line items in fiscal tables and recipients of government “support”, rather than partners in a long‑term investment project whose success underpins productivity, innovation and the tax base future budgets rely on.
Let’s start instead from the idea that students are human‑capital investors. Higher education is a large, leveraged exposure to your own future income: you borrow heavily now, hoping extra skills and credentials will lift lifetime earnings enough to repay the debt and more. That exposure is riddled with non‑diversifiable risks. You cannot diversify across different “selves” or labour markets; you are stuck with the macro conditions, sector shocks and policy changes that hit your cohort after you have already signed. A teaching graduate entering a hiring freeze, or a creative‑industries graduate facing a downturn, bears losses that cannot easily be insured away.
When portrayed in such a manner, the closest analogy is not a household shopping trip but business R&D or a start‑up: costly and risky upfront, uncertain in payoff, but with big spillovers when it goes well. If policymakers took that seriously, they would hard‑wire risk‑sharing into the contract. Income‑contingent loans are a start, but constant retrospective tweaks have shifted more uncertainty onto graduates while improving the government’s numbers. A better deal would set clear caps on lifetime repayments, build in automatic relief in bad states as for example, pauses or write‑downs when unemployment spikes and make explicit that some downside is a deliberate public investment in future skills, not an accidental windfall for one generation at another’s expense.
Flexibility over the life course would naturally follow from this model. The new Lifelong Loan Entitlement already hints at a different approach, allowing people to draw down funding in modular chunks across their working lives rather than staking everything on a single decision at 18. In a genuinely
investor‑centric system, earlier borrowing would not permanently poison the well: switching sectors in your thirties would involve clear, predictable marginal costs, not opaque extra liabilities that quietly deter people from retraining. The message would shift from “you had your chance at 18” to “you can rebalance your human‑capital portfolio as your life and the economy change.”
Information and choice would also look very different. Instead of burying applicants in jargon‑heavy loan documents, the state would provide simple, comparable projections of earnings ranges and repayment paths by course and route. University degrees, apprenticeships and other pathways would be presented as parallel human‑capital investments with different risk–return profiles, not as a crude status hierarchy where one route is automatically “second best”. That would let young people act more like informed investors in themselves, and less like dependants signing whatever contract happens to be put in front of them.
The root of the problem doesn’t encompass just high fees or fiddly interest rates, but also takes into account the shallow way the political class conceptualises students. The narrative needs to be shifted to treat young people as co‑investors in the country’s human capital, share risk like you would in R&D, and design policy around their role in tomorrow’s productive capacity, not just today’s balance sheet. Once that mental model is applied correctly, student finance stops being used as a running sore in British politics and starts to look like a serious, long‑term offer which is one that can rebuild trust with new voters, and support the higher‑skill, higher‑productivity economy everyone claims to want. Until politicians start seeing students not as costs to be managed but as partners in building the UK’s balance sheet of skills, every tweak will fail and the country will keep squandering the very generation it most needs to invest in.
Bibliography
Institute for Fiscal Studies (2022) Student loans reform is a leap into the unknown (Briefing Note BN341). London: IFS. Available at: https://ifs.org.uk/publications/student-loans-reform-leap-unknown (Accessed 17 February 2026).
OECD (2024) Human capital and educational policies. Paris: OECD. Available at: https://www.oecd.org/en/topics/human-capital-and-educational-policies.html
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Égert, B., Botev, J. and Turner, D. (2020) ‘Human capital in OECD countries: A new measure and its policy drivers’, VoxEU / CEPR Policy Portal, 2 November. Available at:
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Department for Education (2023) Student finance to be radically transformed from 2025 [press release]. London: DfE. Available at:
https://www.gov.uk/government/news/student-finance-to-be-radically-transformed-from-2025