Hunt pledges to scrap tuition fee debt for graduate entrepreneurs

Originally written by Timothy Adler on Small Business
Jeremy Hunt has promised to wipe tuition fee debt for young entrepreneurs who launch their own business after leaving university.
As part of his pledge to “turbocharge” the British economy after Brexit, the Tory leadership hopeful said he would waive tuition fee loan repayments for any graduate who launches a start-up employing more than 10 people for five years.
Just 1pc of graduates currently start their own business – a figure which Hunt says must rapidly increase if the country is to prosper after Brexit.
Hunt’s latest tuition fee pledge comes after previous announcements to do away with business rates for 25,000 high-street retailers in five cities across Britain, lower corporation tax to 12.5pc – a 4.5 percentage point decrease on the 17pc rate planned to be in place in April 2010 — and raise the income level at which employees start paying national insurance.
Public-spending arms race
In what appears to be an increasingly reckless public-spending arms race, Tory leadership rival Boris Johnson has also pledged to raise the threshold for national insurance contributions.
Hunt said: “If we are to turbocharge our economy and take advantage of Brexit, we need to back the young entrepreneurs who take risks

Read more...

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *