The announcement appears to set Labour on course for a clash with one of their biggest voter bases, students. It follows other groups losing out with 10 million pensioners hit by the removal of the winter fuel payment and wages being hit by the hike in national insurance.
Tuition fees have been frozen at £9,250 since 2017 but will now rise in line with the Retail Price Index inflation from September 2025. Matching them to the current rate of inflation at 2.7 per cent would mean they increase to around £9,500.
In her announcement, Ms Phillipson said that the changes represented “a new relationship with universities” and warned that the sector will need to make changes as part of the package. “We are determined to maintain the sustainability of our university sector not just for now but for years ahead,” she said.
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Denne historien er fra November 05, 2024-utgaven av The Independent.
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Lily's big moment of truth
After splitting from her husband and spiralling, Lily Allen has checked herself into a clinic. Zoé Beaty looks at what led the actor and singer to crisis point and where she goes next
Unity Mitford was Hitler's 'Baby Reindeer' stalker
The publication of the British socialite’s diaries has revealed that her infatuation with the Nazi leader went much deeper than many historians had realised, writes Guy Walters
Spurs undone as Everton rediscover scoring touch
Goal-shy Everton embarrassed injury-hit Tottenham with their first Premier League goals since Boxing Day, a one-sided opening 45 minutes paving the way for a 3-2 victory at Goodison Park that piled pressure on Ange Postecoglou.
Labour voters value closer EU ties instead of with US
Sir Keir Starmer has been warned not to \"cosy up to the White House\" as a new poll shows nearly two in three Labour voters believe he should build closer economic and security ties to Europe as Donald Trump returns to power.
Farming drama ploughs on but yields only frustration
Starring Martin Clunes, Out There’ is a dramatic pancake where the rambling plots and core tension are as slippery and inscrutable as some of the local accents, writes Nick Hilton
Reeves put on the back foot after exodus of non-doms
Labour has been accused of trying to have it both ways as Rachel Reeves jets off to Davos to try to attract foreign investment while new figures show a millionaire leaves the country every 45 minutes.
'Beating Australia gives us a lot of belief for Six Nations'
Could this be the year Scotland’s golden generation turn hope into glory? It’s my goal to win something, but that’s also my job,’ fly-half Finn Russell tells Harry Latham-Coyle
Calamitous misfits could be United's 'worst ever team'
As Manchester United celebrated and commemorated their past, they made the wrong sort of history, the sort that led Ruben Amorim to wonder if this is their worst-ever team.
Meet the Maga insurgents taking over at White House
How much damage could the anti-establishment agitators in the new administration do? Gabriel Gatehouse reports
'Putin will not stop and ... so neither will the killing'
Sam Kiley speaks to a former Ukrainian resistance fighter about his operations and why he is sceptical of peace talks