Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

UK scraps private school tax perk to boost public education

Private schools will have to pay 20 per cent value added tax on tuition fees

UK scraps private school tax perk to boost public education

Chancellor Rachel Reeves

Dan Kitwood/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo

THE country will end a tax exemption for private schools on Wednesday (1), the centre-left Labour government has announced, in a move set to raise over £1.5 billion for public education.

After years of worsening educational inequalities, from January 1, private schools will have to pay 20 per cent value added tax on tuition fees, which will be used to fund thousands of new teachers and improve standards in state schools.


"It's time things are done differently", chancellor Rachel Reeves said in a statement on Sunday (29).

The funding will "go towards our state schools where 94 per cent of this country's children are educated", she said.

The policy was promised by Labour in its election campaign and officially laid out in its inaugural budget in October.

It hopes the move will bring in £1.5bn for the 2025/2026 school year and rise to £1.7bn a year by 2029/2030, which will be used to fund 6,500 new teachers in the public sector.

Tuition fees in private schools already average £18,000 a year, according to the Independent Schools Council, which represents private schools.

That figure is set to rise, with the government estimating that tuition fees will increase by around 10 per cent, with schools taking on part of the additional cost.

"High and rising standards cannot just be for families who can afford them," said education secretary Bridget Phillipson.

Opponents of the reform say state school enrolment will explode if the private sector is lost, increasing the cost to the government.

But studies contradict this.

The Institute for Fiscal Studies calculated that the number of children in state schools will actually fall by 2030 due to a projected population decline.

Several research centres also point out that the disparity between private and state schools widened sharply under the 14-year Conservative rule.

The Labour government won a landslide election in July promising to boost economic growth and improve public services.

(AFP)

More For You

India deepens ties with Kuwait with historic Modi visit

Narendra Modi in a meeting with the Amir of Kuwait, Sheikh Meshal Al-Ahmad Al-Jaber Al Sabah. (ANI Photo)

India deepens ties with Kuwait with historic Modi visit

INDIA has deepened its diplomatic and economic ties with the Gulf Cooperation Council region this year with prime minister Narendra Modi visiting three of the six GCC countries including Kuwait where no Indian prime minister had been after Indira Gandhi.

As 2024 unfolded, a renewed focus on strategic partnerships in the region took centre stage, with Abu Dhabi serving as the pivotal gateway to this robust alliance.

Keep ReadingShow less
Body of missing Indian student found in Scotland river

Santra Saju

Body of missing Indian student found in Scotland river

THE body of a 22-year-old Indian student missing since earlier this month has been found in a river in Scotland and her family has been informed while formal identification is awaited.

Santra Saju from Kerala was enrolled at the Heriot-Watt University in the Scottish capital of Edinburgh. Police Scotland said in a statement over the weekend that they were made aware of a body in a river near Newbridge, a village near Edinburgh.

Keep ReadingShow less
Starmer urges regulators to cut growth barriers

Keir Starmer

HENRY NICHOLLS/Pool via REUTERS

Starmer urges regulators to cut growth barriers

PRIME MINISTER Keir Starmer has asked the country's regulators, including the financial and competition watchdogs, to remove barriers to growth in an effort to revive a sluggish economy, Sky News reported.

Starmer wrote to more than ten regulators - including the Financial Conduct Authority, the Competition and Markets Authority and energy and water regulators Ofgem and Ofwat, asking them to present pro-growth initiatives to Downing Street by mid-January, Sky said.

Keep ReadingShow less
Polar Preet

Harpreet Chandi

Polar Preet takes on 'impossible' solo North Pole challenge

ARMY veteran Harpreet Chandi, nicknamed Polar Preet, is set to attempt what experts once declared impossible - a solo, unsupported trek to the North Pole.

The 36-year-old from Derby aims to be the first woman to achieve this feat in 2025, braving brutal conditions that have deterred explorers for the past decade, reported the Times.

Keep ReadingShow less
Renowned Pakistani writer Bapsi Sidhwa passes away

Bapsi Sidhwa

Renowned Pakistani writer Bapsi Sidhwa passes away


CELEBRATED Pakistan-born novelist and pioneer of South Asian literature Bapsi Sidhwa, best known for her iconic novel Ice Candy Man, passed away on Wednesday (25) at the age of 86 in Houston, US, her family confirmed.

Her brother, Feroze Bhandara, announced that memorial ceremonies would be held over three days, followed by her last rites in Houston.

Keep ReadingShow less