<<it wasn't uncosted, you might think it was realistic, you might think it was undeliverable, fair enough, but it wasn't uncosted.>>
No? Well when asked how it would be paid for his reply was; “I don't have the simple answer for it at this stage".
That sounds like it was un-costed to me.
Respected thinktank the Institute for Fiscal Studies said about student debt in May: “One option would be to compensate these students by clearing or reducing their tuition fee debts. “This would be extremely costly, however, as the outstanding stock of loans for these graduates is around £30bn.” Contributions from readers Join the discussion by logging in or registering for a free account. emeryderek_22928 11:26 on 1st June 2017 Corbyn is not "writing off debt." He is transferring it to the national debt which will become even larger. UK economic growth is far too low to match our current liabilities so natinoal debt is rising. Ageing demographics ensures that the gap between future unfunded liabilities and economic growth will grow by compound interest.Corbyn is anti-business which will ensure even lower future economic growth. Are there no politicans that can do maths?"
Anyhow, that's me done on this. It's Friday and I play golf on Fridays. Have a great weekend.
you're wrong. He said he would like to write off all historical student debt, when asked how he would pay for it he said he didn't know.
Labours manifesto said the would end tuition fees from autumn 2017 to be paid for from a raise in corporation tax at a cost of 5.7 billion so costed, whether you believe those cost to be accurate or not.
Again, that is policy, not a bribe, you don't have to agree, Captain Dart has provided a counter argument about how much the increase in corporate tax would raise, but it is still a costed policy, but carry on deflecting from the main point, the tory bung to the DUP.
You haven't answered the question, is a manifesto promise to cut taxes a bribe?