Students ‘spend more on books than booze’

STUDENTS are more likely to spend money on books than alcohol, a survey suggests.

On average, students spent £65.43 on alcohol during their first month at university, and £76.34 during that period on books, according to the Credit Confidential poll.

It also reveals that new students are now more frugal when socialising than they were in the past.

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The findings show that students currently in the first year of their degree spent an average of £40.93 on alcohol during the first month of their studies, while those currently in their third year spent an average of £65.24 in the first few weeks of their course.

But when it comes to books, current first-year students spent £86.59 on reading materials during their first month of university, while current third-year students paid out £73.09.

The survey, which questioned more than 700 students and recent graduates, also found that nearly a third have borrowed money from friends and family, while 13 per cent have credit card debts and 9 per cent have a bank loan.

More than two-fifths said it was normal these days for them to have debt, while a third admitted they were worried about what they owed.

Vice-president of Credit Confidential Paul Lewis said: “The continuing economic gloom is having an impact on how students spend their cash – with many freshers choosing to open their wallets at the bookshop instead of the bar.”

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