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Oxbridge graduates start on ?8K more than post-92 alumni

Graduates of the universities of Oxford and Cambridge start on salaries that are ?7,600, or 42 per cent, higher than those from post-92 institutions

December 18, 2014

Kings College, University of Cambridge

That is according to a new report by the Sutton Trust, , which says that the average starting salary for an Oxbridge graduate is ?25,582, compared with ?18,009 for alumni of new universities.

The research, based on data from the 中国A片 Statistics Agency, puts the mean wage six months after graduation at ?21,031 for what the Sutton Trust classes as the UK’s 28 other most selective universities, and ?19,684 for other pre-92 institutions.

Stark inequalities persist even when the figures are adjusted to take account of factors such as socio-economic background, previous educational attainment and attendance at private or state school.

When these are factored in, the average starting salary of an Oxbridge graduate is ?23,613, which is 25 per cent higher than the ?18,853 wage that students of post-92 universities can expect once they leave.

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Peter Lampl, the chairman of the Sutton Trust, said more had to be done to raise the aspirations and attainment of school students from poorer backgrounds.

“This new research shows how important it is that we enable low- and middle-income students with the ability to go to Oxbridge and other elite universities to fulfil their potential,” he said.

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“With your chances of going to a top university nearly 10 times higher if you come from a rich rather than a poor neighbourhood, it is vital that we redouble our efforts to improve access to these institutions.”

The report, published on 17 December, also looks at the starting salaries of graduates according to the course they studied.

It says that engineering and technology graduates will earn ?8,800 (55 per cent) more on average than design and creative arts graduates, and ?8,000 (49 per cent) more than English students.

A science or engineering graduate from Oxbridge is likely to command a starting salary ?11,800 higher than a graduate in an arts or humanities subject from a post-1992 institution.

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The report also says that graduates who attended fee-paying secondary schools earned average starting salaries ?1,300 higher than their state school educated counterparts.

chris.havergal@tesglobal.com

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Reader's comments (1)

The variable salary levels perhaps highlights the UK problem of relatively low productivity and a complementary low wage economy reflected in too few high-quality, well-remunerated jobs for graduates, hence the apparent resort of many to technician or non graduate opportunities. Presumably a major part of the solution would be to tap much more FDI expertise, both large firms and particularly SMEs willing to generate and collaborate in industrial R&D, high tech production and specialised business services, here in the UK. International competition for such investment being extremely intense perhaps suggests the UK should thus especially offer a differentiating well trained, very skilled and highly competent workforce and leaders, probably of the kind generated through Higher and Advanced Apprenticeships, and the Doctoral Training Centres, now being rolled out with matching Government funding, and not least an almost universal requirement for accreditation of degrees by Professional Institutes/Societies as standard practice.

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