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France serves up €1 meals to all university students in effort to cut hardship

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CitrixNews Staff
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France serves up €1 meals to all university students in effort to cut hardship
Staff serve university students at a food counter The €1 rate was previously only available to those receiving financial aid or with low incomes. Photograph: Christophe Archambault/AFP/Getty ImagesThe €1 rate was previously only available to those receiving financial aid or with low incomes. Photograph: Christophe Archambault/AFP/Getty ImagesFrance serves up €1 meals to all university students in effort to cut hardship

Ministers take action after survey shows almost half of students had gone without food for financial reasons

French universities have begun offering €1 (86p) meals to all students regardless of income in a measure designed to address financial hardship.

Student unions have been pushing to extend the €1 rate – down from the usual €3.30 – for a three-course meal to all students, which was previously only available to those with low incomes or receiving financial aid.

For Alexandre Ioannides, an 18-year-old student in Paris, the measure will drastically cut his monthly canteen expenses.

“I come here 20 times a month. That’s about €60. Whereas now, I’ll pay €20,” he said, adding the savings would go towards “going out or eating at a restaurant”.

Students carry trays while waiting in a queue to be served at a food counterAbout 667,000 French students benefited from the €1 scheme in 2024. Photograph: Christophe Archambault/AFP/Getty Images

The policy is targeted at alleviating financial strain for students in France, where a survey by a student union organisation in January found that 48% had gone without food for financial reasons and 23% did so several times a month.

About 667,000 students benefited from the €1 lunch scheme in 2024, a 5.3% increase from the previous year, with about 46.7m meals served at the discounted and standard €3.30 rates, according to the university restaurant operator Crous.

The government is preparing for a rise in demand, with the higher education minister, Philippe Baptiste, promising €120m in 2027 to back the scheme.

“It is a small internal revolution,” said Baptiste, who has promised to oversee the programme to ensure it does not lead to an excessive workload for canteen staff or a decline in food quality.

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Originally reported by The Guardian