Broadband tax to be made law - 50p per month


The 50 pence a month tax will apply to everyone with a fixed line telephone. Speaking at a debate in London, Mr Timms said the tax will be presented to parliament as part of the Finance Bill. But the Tory MP John Whittingdale said the tax, which could raise up to £175m a year to fund high speed networks, would be opposed by the Conservatives.

Are UK Universities Too Expensive?


As thousands of teenagers look over their A-Level results and decide what to do next, research from Child Trust Fund provider The Children's Mutual, has highlighted the cost of a three year university study to students and their parents. So are UK universities too expensive? And how can the financial strain be eased?

According to the latest figures from The Children's Mutual, for the average three year university course, a student will need to have around 42,000 pounds behind them - an amount of which a good proportion is likely to come from student loans. However, new research has shown that the rest of this funding is also likely to come from parents who are then either forced to take from their savings, or maybe even remortgage their house.


University costs are also likely to have been exacerbated by the lack of summer jobs available to those who are due to start their higher education in October. This has meant that unless children have been working during their A-Levels, they may have even less saved up for when they leave home.
Although it seems easy to label UK universities as too expensive, particular in regards to recent recessionary developments, in 2005 the government did establish the Child Trust Fund (CTFs) in order to ensure that future students will have a significant amount of money to fund their studies should they need it. CTFs are also intended as an incentive for both adults and children to open savings accounts - and to learn about the importance of putting money away.

However, it should be acknowledged that those eligible for a CTF must have been born on or after the 1st September 2002 - leaving a significant gap of future generations who are likely to be in a similar situation to this years graduates. Overall, the cost of this years graduates is said to be at around the 25 billion pound mark, 3 million pounds more than last year. If this is set to increase at the same rate, by 2015 this amount will have reached 43 million pounds. Consequently, if parents can afford to put any money away now, they should certainly do so - and as I write this, fixed rate bonds are currently a better option than ISAs in terms of average returns.

Paul Roberts writes about banking, savings and the best savings rates.

Research in Ireland Has Found That Women Are Better at Saving Money Than Men


Research in Ireland has found that women tend to be better than men at saving money. Of course, such 'data' will likely fuel the old 'it's official, women are better than men at something else - add that to the list above driving, multi-tasking and smelling nice,' argument that has been muttered, countered, and accepted since the dawn of time.

Yet, it also shows something more positive, i.e. that a nation also looks to be battling its way out of recession quite successfully - and that more people may now be aware of the importance of savings.


The research (collected and available at postbank.ie) shows that more than half (58 percent) of men and women asked in their Quarterly Savings Index consider the female of the species to be the better savers. Women themselves are confident that they the most frugal gender, with 65 percent claiming that they were the best savers. Yet, the actual statistics pitch men and women closer together - with 80 percent of men and 82 percent of women saving regularly - whilst men are said to put more away, with a third of those asked stating that they saved €250 a month.

The data is a good sign. The number of people devoted to saving is the highest in years, and the primary reason for doing so is security. This is a fact that is evident when one acknowledges the average decline in interest rates across the country - similar to that which is being seen in the UK and the rest of Europe - but it has also been backed up by nearly half (49 percent) of the postbank respondents who admitted they were concerned about the safety of their money at a time when possible unemployment is a lingering reality.
However, the risk of unemployment is clearly not the only reason that many are eager to put some money away each month. Clearly the system is showing its worth aside from the benefits of interest available at times outside of recession. With a small proportion of our income being deposited into our saving accounts automatically, it is easier to forget it is happening, and less easy for us to spend it without thinking. There is a barrier that doesn't exist when you're stuffing cash into your mattress.

With the global economic crisis, the public are seemingly reassessing the importance of saving and how it can best be managed at a time when it is seen as both difficult and vital. However, alongside each individual's assessment of their own responsibility and that of the banks over their savings, such control no doubt has a knock on effect on how they treat their finances generally.

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