03 social support for students
This page has been updated. Read 03. social support for students in Higher education & research in France, facts and figures 10th edition - June 2017
At the start of the 2013-2014 academic year, the number of students receiving support stood at more than 660,000, or approximately 35% of students enrolled for a course for which a grant was available. In all, the amount of financial and social support provided came to almost €6 billion in 2013, compared with €3.5 bn in 1995.
In higher education, over 660,000 students were receiving at least some form of financial aid at the start of the 2013-2014 academic year (table 03.01a and table 03.01b). The proportion of students benefitting in this way was stable against the previous year. More than one third of students (34.8%) enrolled for a course for which a grant was available (see opposite) received support, a much higher proportion than was observed at the start of 2008-2009 (29.3% of students supported in 2007, 32.7% in 2008). At this point the income ceilings for awarding a grant based on social criteria were raised in order to increase the number of beneficiaries. The number of students whose grants are based on social criteria, and who now represent 96% of assisted students, increased by 1.7% in 2013, whereas fewer requests are now made to the national emergency aid fund (Fonds national d'aide d'urgence - FNAU) (aid on a one-off or annual basis). The proportion of student grant-holders is slightly down in universities (34.8%). It is stable in classes preparing for admission to Grandes Ecoles (Classe préparatoire aux grandes écoles - CPGE) (27.9%) and in the Advanced technician's section (Section de technicien supérieur - STS) (45.3%), the branch of study where the proportion is highest (chart 03.02).
However, these data do not cover the entire range of financial, social, and fiscal support, both direct and indirect, that students may receive.
In addition to scholarships, loans and grants (including emergency aid) provided by the French Ministry of Education, Higher Education and Research (Ministère de l'Education nationale, de l'Enseignement supérieur et de la Recherche - MENESR), direct support in 2013 consisted of Social housing benefit (Allocation de logement à caractère social - ALS) and Personalised housing benefit (Aide personnalisée au logement - APL) both paid by the National Family Allowance Fund (Caisse nationale d'allocations familiales - CNAF), as well as various tax benefits (tax reduction for a dependent student, granting of an additional half-share allowance when the student is attached to the parents' tax household). Lastly, indirect support is available. This includes support services provided by the French Regional Student Services Agency (Centre régional des œuvres universitaires et scolaires - CROUS), support for associations, exemption from payment of tuition fees for grant-holders, university medical and social staff and from the charge levied due to the deficit in the student social security system.
In 2013, this student support amounted to a total of almost €6 bn, compared with €3.5 bn in 1995, an increase of more than 65% at current prices and 28% at constant prices (table 03.03).
International comparisons published by the OECD of the support students receive show only grants and loans awarded by the State, which in France amounts to about €1.8 bn. Thus the ALS and APL, and also tax benefits, which represented €2.9 bn in 2013, are not taken into account in the OECD indicators. The amount used for these international comparisons therefore under-estimates the total amount of support that students in fact receive. If these benefits were taken into consideration under the heading of public support, in the same way as grants, then the share of aid provided by the State would rise from 8.0% to 19.7% (2011 data) of public spending on higher education (chart 03.04).
Laurence Dauphin & Aline Landreau
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Key figures
students receiving support
Metropolitan France + overseas departments
grant-holders according to social criteria
Metropolitan France + overseas departments
Metropolitan France + overseas departments
Metropolitan France + overseas departments
Metropolitan France + overseas departments
Metropolitan France + overseas departments
03.01a Trend in the number of students receiving direct financial support - by type of support
Scope: grants based on social criteria (including AIE until 1999), grants based on university criteria (abolished in 2008), merit grants, study allowances (abolished in 2008), student loans (abolished in 2009), IUFM benefits (abolished in 1998), national emergency aid fund on a one-off or annual basis (introduced in 2008).
1 Several types of aid can be combined. In 2013-2014, 14,242 students received a social criteria grant plus occasional emergency aid and 936 received both types of emergency aid. However, it is not possible to combine a social criteria grant with annual emergency aid.
MENESR-DEPP
CNOUS
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03.01b Trend in the number of students receiving direct financial support - by type of course 1
Scope: grants based on social criteria (including special individual aid (Aide individuelle exceptionnelle - AIE) until 1999), grants based on university criteria (abolished in 2008), grants on merit, study allowances (abolished in 2008), student loans (abolished in 2009), teacher training college (Institut universitaire de formation des maîtres - IUFM) benefits (abolished in 1998), national emergency aid fund on a one-off or annual basis (introduced in 2008).
1 Grants based on social criteria, grants based on university criteria and grants awarded on merit.
2 In 2008 and 2009, students enrolled in IUFMs attached to a university were not counted. There were 13,422 grant-holders in IUFMs attached to universities in 2009-2010.
MENESR-DEPP
CNOUS
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03.02 Trend in the proportion of students receiving grants by branch of study (%)
1 In 2009, students enrolled in IUFMs attached to a university were not counted. There were 13,422 grant-holders in IUFMs attached to universities in 2009-2010.
MENESR-DEPP
CNOUS
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03.03 Support for students (in €M, %)
1 Merit aid was introduced in 2008.
2 Within universities and engineering schools.
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03.04 Public support (loans and grants) for higher education as a % of public expenditure on higher education in 2011
On average in the OECD countries, public support (loans and grants) represents 19.6% of public expenditure on higher education.
1 For France, if housing and tax benefits were included, the share of central government aid would rise to 19.7% in 2011.
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Related statistical publication
Translation
03 - l’aide sociale aux étudiants - Laurence Dauphin & Aline Landreau