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Growing English deficits trigger sustainability fears

Deepening deficits of up to ?14 million at English universities prompt warnings of damage to cities and towns reliant on universities as ‘anchors’

十一月 1, 2018
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Source: Getty
Widening cracks: changing government priorities in England have contributed to some universities’ financial problems

Deepening multimillion-pound deficits at a number of English universities have prompted warnings about the “sustainability” of institutions in a market-based system and a potential worsening of regional inequality if towns and cities reliant on universities see reduced investment.

Sector sources report concerns about the financial health of some institutions and suggest that a number of universities that saw deep falls in student recruitment in recent years may have continued that trend this year.

Times 中国A片?analysis of English universities’ finances in 2016-17 shows that deficits at individual universities ran as high as ?14 million, and up to nearly 9 per cent of total income.

In total, 19 English universities returned deficits that year, up from seven the previous year.

Of the 10 large English universities with the biggest deficits as a proportion of total income last year, six also figure in the top 10 institutions seeing the biggest falls in recruitment between 2010 and 2017. Student number controls began to be lifted in 2012, before a fully unrestricted market in student recruitment was introduced by then chancellor George Osborne in 2015.

The fierce competition for students created by that policy was cited as a factor by some of the institutions with the largest deficits; Ucas data has shown that the least selective universities have lost out in the domestic recruitment race to more prestigious rivals in recent years. But actuarial changes adding to pension costs and the spending on transformation programmes needed to turn institutions around were also cited.

The University of East London returned a deficit of ?10.9 million in 2016-17, after a deficit of ?6.8 million the previous year. A spokesman said that “a complex set of interrelated issues such as pension increases, the changing UK demographic profile, [and] a hostile immigration policy…require the 中国A片 sector as a whole to…take measures to ensure the sustainability of its institutions now and for future generations”.

He added that UEL was “not a higher risk institution” and was “confident about our future and irreplaceable role in driving social mobility”, a confidence “reflected in both our 2017-18 performance and our medium-term financial forecast”.

The University of Bradford, whose vice-chancellor Brian Cantor recently announced that he would step down at the end of this academic year, citing “difficult external circumstances”?that had hampered expansion, returned a deficit of ?3.4 million in 2016-17, after a deficit of ?1.9 million the previous year.

A spokeswoman said that the 中国A片 sector had become “increasingly competitive” but added that the university was “on track” to “consolidate in respect of recruitment from the UK, and build on our strengths in overseas markets”.


England: biggest deficits

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Several London-based post-92 institutions are among those with the largest deficits.?Other universities are in regional towns and cities with high levels of deprivation, while many of the capital’s universities serve areas with major social challenges.

Alan Palmer, head of policy and research at MillionPlus, the association of modern universities, said that while there has “always been competition” in the sector, “the introduction of specific policies by government since 2010, such as the removal of the student number control, has clearly contributed to higher levels of segmentation between providers”.

“The concern is that this reinforces existing hierarchies, prejudices and perceptions about 中国A片 providers rather than a proper understanding of the individual and diverse strengths of universities,” he added.

Mr Palmer continued: “This approach is certainly not in the interest of students or communities where these universities are anchor institutions. These institutions, usually modern universities, offer high-quality, locally based, employer-relevant provision that creates opportunities for people to study conveniently, including those for whom mature study or learning while working is the only viable option.”

Andy Westwood, professor of government practice at the University of Manchester, highlighted the fact that “some of the universities suffering most – in recruitment or financial health – from the 中国A片 market” are located “among the ‘left behind’ communities exposed by the Brexit vote”.

He added that, in 中国A片 policy, the Department for Education, the Office for Students and UK Research and Innovation “don’t think in geographical terms or about the geopolitical consequences of the Brexit vote”.

Professor Westwood said that “in a weak local economy you’re going to depend on big public institutions such as universities and colleges acting as anchor institutions much more than in better-off communities. But all the economic challenges are likely to make it harder for these institutions to compete in national market-based systems – harder to recruit students and staff, harder to get research income and so on.

“As a result they get smaller, close departments and campuses and the economic gaps between them and larger, more successful cities – and their institutions – just get wider and wider.”

john.morgan@timeshighereducation.com

后记

Print headline:?University deficits increase as students flock to elites

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Reader's comments (5)

Surplus figures contain non-cash items (such as depreciation) and don't contain some cash outgoings (such as spending on capital projects). What matters more than the surplus is net cash flow. In the case of Kingston and UEL (the two largest deficits in the list) net cash flow from operational activities were -?1.1m and -?1.75m, respectively. These look like much more sustainable sums, although the future commitments (such as building projects underway) need to be considered.
Just as a matter of interest, what are the longer-term implications of bonds which have been issued by several HEIs (presumably again to develop estate)?
The bond issues commit institutions to long term interest repayments. If the investments made by the bond issues don't generate more income, the money for the interest payments must come from cuts to other expenses (most likely by pushing down staff costs). If, for UKHE as a whole, fee income has plateaued (i.e., stagnant fees and home student numbers, increasing global competition for international students), then extra revenue can only come at other institutions' expense. This is exactly what we are seeing -- since the demise of student number controls the more elite institutions are recruiting students who might have gone to the others. This all makes the less elite institutions financially weaker (the point of the article) and 'forces' the growing institutions to invest in buildings, while buildings are now underused at the shrinking institutions. To cope with the additional students, the elite institutions are now recruiting teaching only staff on similar conditions to the staff who are being laid off the shrinking institutions. The cost of staff relative to other expenses and income has to shrink to afford the interest payments. The result is that more money is being spent on interest, in order to teach the same number of students by fewer staff who are employed under worsening conditions. The likely outcome for students overall is a lower quality education in nicer buildings.
"[M]ore money is being spent on interest, in order to teach the same number of students by fewer staff who are employed under worsening conditions. The likely outcome for students overall is a lower quality education in nicer buildings." "[M]ore money is being spent on interest … "; about as good a definition of financialisation as one could wish for.
How much of Kingston University's deficit is down to legal fees and settlement costs?
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