Labour MPs criticize Britain’s regressive student loan system, intensifying calls for Sir Keir Starmer to overhaul the setup that burdens graduates with massive debts. Young people face spiraling costs from what many call unfair financial terms, sparking widespread debate over Plan 2 loans.
Chancellor’s Freeze Sparks Backlash
Campaigners label the chancellor a “loan shark” after the announcement of a three-year freeze on the repayment threshold. This change means some borrowers repay far more than they borrowed due to high interest rates.
Education minister Bridget Phillipson pledges to review Plan 2 loans but stops short of promising alterations amid rising cost concerns.
Westminster Debate Highlights Urgency
During a Westminster Hall debate, Ilford South Labour MP Jas Athwal declares the system “in urgent need of reform.”
“The whole system needs to be reformed, and tinkering on the edges is not going to cut it anymore. A much more fairer system is what we are looking for at the moment,” Athwal states. “This whole system burdens millions with balances they may never clear. It follows the letter of the principle whilst violating its very spirit.”
“Many believe Plan 2 loans and the system at large are predatory, regressive, kills graduates’ ambitions, and the spiralling interest is stressful for students.”
York Outer Labour MP Luke Charters, a Plan 2 graduate, describes it as a “Frankenstein’s mess.” “It is an absolute dog’s dinner of a system,” he adds.
Calls for Radical Change
Leeds East Labour MP Richard Burgon argues the system “breaks a whole generation.” He advocates cancelling student debt entirely: “As a society, it’s time for a serious discussion about cancelling student debt. That would provide immediate relief to young people; instead, we should fund our education through progressive taxation.”
Athwal urges ministers to “go away and have a real think about it,” though he avoids a full overhaul discussion in the session.
Plan 2 Loans Explained
Plan 2 loans apply to students starting university from 2012 to 2023 in England and Wales. Interest accrues at Retail Prices Index inflation plus up to three percent, based on earnings.
Graduates repay nine percent of income above the threshold, currently £28,470. Post-November budget, the threshold freezes at £29,385 from April 2026 for three years, rather than rising with inflation. It resumes RPI increases from April 2030.
Student Protests and Government Response
The National Union of Students rallied in Westminster earlier this month, demanding reversal of the threshold freeze.
Officials note the system comes from the prior Conservative government. Threshold freezes aim to safeguard taxpayers, current students, and future learners.

