Tax exemptions on private schools are a “luxury we cannot afford”, the education secretary said ahead of a new policy coming into effect. Bridget Phillipson defended the government ending the exemption from Wednesday. Writing in the Telegraph, she said “very few families” would leave the schools as a result. Separately, she told the Sunday Times she had the support of middle-class parents as they had already been “priced out” of private education. The Conservatives labelled the decision a “vindictive policy that will worsen the education of every single child, regardless of the school they are educated in”.
The policy was outlined by the Chancellor Rachel Reeves during the autumn Budget. The money raised would go towards investing in state schools and teacher recruitment, Phillips wrote in the Telegraph. She added that £1.8bn would be raised a year by 2029-30. But the Independent Schools Council (ISC), which represents most of the UK’s private schools, said the money the government claimed it would raise was an “estimate, not a fact”.
The negative effects of this unprecedented tax on education will be felt by families and children across state and independent schools, the ISC’s chief executive, Julie Robinson said on Sunday. She added that they are not alone in predicting that the policy “could cost the treasury money and would damage state education” due to the cost of educating more children in the sector.
Approximately 93% of children in the UK currently attend state schools, Phillipson said. The government has pledged to recruit 6,500 more teachers funded by the money raised in the policy, Phillipson said. She added that “high-quality” teaching has the biggest impact on children’s learning, but that “in some key subjects the teacher pipeline has been running dry”.
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