It would be more honest, but it would also be more honest to assess the student as an adult.
In other words, base the grant on their own income and assets, rather than parents who may still be struggling with celtic tiger mortgages ( that cohort will now be seeing their children entering college education).
I've had an interesting time delving into the Dublin property market , for rentals and purchase, over the last couple of weeks.
The dysfunctionality is mind boggling. Huge numbers of desperate people, lined up outside poorly built, badly maintained, cramped blocks of flats, in the early morning rain. All, literally, begging to be allowed to give half their salary to some absentee landlord.
I was looking at one apartment for sale and was met with a huge queue stretching down the road.
The Estate Agent lead me away and told me the queue was for a rental in the same block. The rent for a 50 square metre 2 bedder was around 2.3k per month. He said that these people were the lucky ones, the ones who had been deemed worthy of viewing the flat. He gets hundreds of emails for every rental and ignores most of them, picking a few, at random, for the viewings.
So, why don't these people buy, instead of rent, I said. I mean, they looked like people young enough to get 35 year mortgages, which would be about 850 a month for a 250k mortgage. Of course, the reason was simple. They have no capital, and no way of getting capital. They were most likely, low paid, but essential workers. The Health Care Assistants, the cleaners, the shop workers, the factory production line staff, the security guards, the warehouse operatives and they, probably, earned below average wages, 30k or less. Now, they would be gouged for rents they couldn't possibly afford. So HAP would come in to make up the difference. So , not only are wealthy landlords grabbing large portions of low paid workers wages, they are getting a big sloppy handout from the taxpayer.