no the means tested system is wank.
just because my parents earn more than 30k does not mean they can afford to give out that amount of money.
it also does not take into account how many children in the family. 29k for a family with one child is a lot easier to support than 31k with four children all going to university.
Even before the times of student loans, the means-testing was always like that, though. Its nothing new. We were in exactly the situation you describe. My parents were normal middle-class proffessionals, with no spare cash and 4 kids who all went through Uni. the government gave us nothing because we were 'well off', and my parents could afford to give us little. Thus the 40 hour working week.
Well, unfortunately, quite rightly, higher education costs money. You can either afford it or not. Whatever opinion you hold these are the facts.
Without wishing to discriminate along class lines, and make further education a closed shop for the 'posh', I think people do need to recognise this fact, a little more. The truth is, if you really want that qualification, then you'll have to be prepared to pay for it.
Anyone, however poor CAN do this, if they are prepared to put enough effort in. They can either work full time for a year [or 2, or 3] BEFORE they go to college, and save up [that may mean living at home, and foregoing boozy nights out and football], or they can work through their time at college, or they can accept the debts and pay for it later.
Beat this for FLAIR expenditure: I've used my student loan to go on 3 holidays this year, with 2 more to come
Fair play. See, I've no issue with that attitude, so long as its consistent, and isn't followed by an 'I'm poor, why won't the government give me more free money' whine 6 months down the line. Fill your boots.