uttershambles wrote: ↑Tue Jun 18, 2024 10:03 am
I agree with many previous posters. My school is always proud to point out that 50% of its students don't pay full fees. There are lots of kids on either full bursaries or significant bursaries. On top of it, we are often asked to donate to the bursary fund which many people do and the school has a number of fundraising activities throughout the year to support their bursary fund. I'm sorry but, if we have to pay 20% extra, I no longer can or want to finance and contribute towards these bursaries. The whole point is that these 20% are supposed to make state schools better, right? So there should be no need for private school bursary funded places anymore. Something has to give. Surely, even the most hardened supporters of this scheme wouldn't expect any bursaries to continue. I think the whole situation is very reminiscent of the Brexit shambles and will. end in a similar fashion, where there are no winners and everyone will be a loser
You are, of course correct.
However, the additional donations to fund bursaries are not the only way that full fee payers subsidise worthy pupils with bursaries.
Simply it’s the aggregation of fees at different rates of collection.
So for example if fees are £1,000 per term and 50 pupils pay £600 and 50 pupils pay £1,000 you have total fee income of £80,000 or a total bursary rate of 20% with total fees per pupil of £800 per head
So your child pays £1,000 but only £800 is available for the operating model
That’s how you fund bursaries
The idea that those 50 pupils paying £600 can suddenly find an additional 20% VAT is for the birds. Not going to happen
So that additional 20% Vat will be levied on the gross fee base I.e. £20,000 will have to be paid to HMRC
In this scenario the 50 fee payers at 100% will no longer need to pay £1,000 per term they will need to pay £1,400 (a 40% increase) to maintain the same fee rate
I.e
Bursary pupils £30,000
Full fee pupils £70,000
Vat (20,000)
Retained school income £80,000
Which is the same as before
This policy measure is ridiculous. And even if the VAT is only leveraged on the net reduced fee rate for the bursary pupils then it’s open to manipulation which HMRC won’t like and the burden is still carried by the full fee payers