The thing is, the UK student Loan is NOT proper debt, okay?
Yes, you will be paying more than, for example I am, but the interest on the loan is so negligable as to make no difference, you have to be earning what, more than 16K a year before you start paying it back, and that 16K is protected anyway, every penny of that is student loan free.
What's more, if you stop working/earning over 16K... you stop paying it back until you earn over the cap again, also, only you are liable for that money, so if you get married, it isn't your household income that you're tested on, but your own.
Say your wife/you decides to leave their job to have a child - her student loan payments cease when she's not working, you don't have to make that money up.
The main issue for me is that as I plan to be self-employed (barrister) I won't have the ease of using the PAYE function, and as such will have a major headache at the end of the tax year.
TL;DR
Chill, it really, really isn't that bad, and doesn't operate in the same way a normal loan does.
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Final note, a lot of the controversy over the increase in UK tuition fees is down to Nick Clegg.
Everyone expected the Tories to put up the fees, everyone really, expected Labour to do the same should, by some miracle they stayed in power.
What we (the liberal democrat voters) didn't think, was that Clegg would throw away his flagship policy, - one he had, whilst campaigning signed a pledge along with every other Lib Dem MP in the country, saying in the next Parliament they would fight tuitions fees and a rise in them - for a chance to get a couple of Lib Dem ministers and to be deputy PM. Even worse was the way Vince Cable tried to back pedal.
Anyway, my thoughts there