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Competition vs collaboration

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1 Competition vs collaboration
Higher education Competition vs collaboration Pam Tatlow Chief Executive Million+

2 million+ Our role: a university think-tank Our mission:
To shape public policy and funding regimes on a non-party basis so that they enable: people from every walk of life to benefit from access to universities that excel in teaching, research and knowledge transfer business, the NHS, not-for-profit sectors and Government to benefit from the full potential of all universities

3 What we do Advocacy Ministers Opposition Parties MPs
Government and funding council officials Evidence to Parliamentary Select Committees Media and press Partnerships With university affiliates, students and other stakeholders

4 What we do Behind the headlines: What’s the value of
Evidence – Policy and Research Reports: Who should train the teachers? Behind the headlines: What’s the value of a UK degree? Student Opportunity Funding: why it counts

5 6/7 in top 50/60 world university rankings
UK HEIs and world-rankings 162 HEIs 6/7 in top 50/60 world university rankings 18 HEIs 4 HEIs 130 HEIs 10 HEIs

6 1997 – 2010 Labour Government Investment in early years, primary and secondary education Target: 50% of years olds to access HE Expansion of funded numbers

7 2004 HE Act (England) Universities entitled to levy GB £3000pa tuition fee per full-time student (2006) £3000 = additional income Backed by State student loan system (full-time) Reintroduction of maintenance grants £100m p.a. to promote participation (AimHigher) Focus on widening participation by social class Leitch Report ‘ Prosperity for all in the Global Economy: World Class Skills’ – goals for 2020 (adult access)

8 HE funding devolved Scotland Wales
2007 Scottish Government abolishes fees for full-time students who reside and study in Scotland Wales No top-up fees for full-time students who reside and study in Wales; Welsh Assembly pays additional fees for students in England BUT review of funding in Wales ( ) & HE fees an issue in Scottish independence referendum (Sept 2014)

9 EU EU students study for free in Scotland / access fee loans in England UK universities successful in winning EU research funding

10 Research Science & Innovation Investment Framework 2004-2014
Higher Education Innovation Fund (£150m p.a)

11 International Trans-National Education (TNE) partnerships
Prime Minister’s Initiative 1 & 2

12 UK Outcomes *Part-time UG & PG decline post-2008
* FT UG 1,231,988 1,928,140 PG 335,325 568,505 *Part-time UG & PG decline post-2008 By 2010 one in three UGs are over 21 the first time they enter university Source: HESA 2013

13 International

14 Universities Flexibility of provision and often work / professionally focused e.g first business courses Significant contribution to: Social mobility in the UK Newer industries e.g creative, digital Multi-disciplinary but also world-leading research International higher education partnerships throughout the world

15 Some Universities High levels of recruitment from state schools and colleges Older graduates – one in three undergraduates enter higher education when over 21 Majority of black and ethnic minority students who enter HE Opportunities for ‘first-in-family’ students to study at university

16 2010 Coalition Government (Westminster)
Teaching grant cut by 80% Fee cap increased to £9k for English universities Deregulation of full-time student numbers linked with high grades Emphasis on market + alternative providers Research funding : ‘cash protected’

17 Part-time Course grants scrapped Fee but not maintenance loans
Repayment after 4 years of study if £21k+ salary Positive real rate of interest on loans RAB charge:  – 7.5%  (HMT saving) Part-time loan budget of £120m reduced to £30m

18 Breakdown of teaching related income from 2009-10 to 2014-15
Sir Alan Langlands, Higher Education Funding Council for England, 18 April 2013

19 Research 2011-12 ‘Quality-related’ = £1.93bn 25% to 5 HEIs
Research Councils = £1.51bn 25% to 4 HEIs 50% to 11 HEIs 75% to 24 HEIs

20 Change Since 2009-10 QR Research Councils TOTAL Russell Group
QR Research Councils TOTAL Russell Group 7,871,000 1.9% -43,879,000 0.8% -36,008,000 1.4% 1994 Group -6,663,000 -0.2% -10,774,000 -0.3% -17,437,000 Modern -14,857,000 -0.6% -5,509,000 -20,366,000 -0.4% Other -30,825,000 -1.2% -16,118,000 -46,943,000 -0.8% UNITED KINGDOM -44,474,000 0.0% -76,280,000 -120,754,000 Source: million+ analysis of HESA Finances of HEIs

21 Share by HEI Type QR Research Councils TOTAL Russell Group
QR Research Councils TOTAL Russell Group 1,294,813,000 67.1% 1,132,401,000 75.0% 2,427,214,000 70.6% 1994 Group 146,135,000 7.6% 116,041,000 7.7% 262,176,000 Modern 139,070,000 7.2% 37,756,000 2.5% 176,826,000 5.1% Other 350,056,000 18.1% 222,879,000 14.8% 572,935,000 16.7% UNITED KINGDOM 1,930,074,000 100.0% 1,509,077,000 3,439,151,000 Source: million+ analysis of HESA Finances of HEIs

22

23 Public vs private expenditure on HE (2009)

24 UK: 1.77% Canada: 1.74% Sweden: 3.37% Gross domestic expenditure
on R&D as % of GDP (2011) UK: % Canada: % Sweden: % Source: OECD 2013

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26 Conclusions: 2012/13 Enhanced earnings, employment outcomes, tax receipts Positive spill-over effects for companies / employers UK degree: remains exceptionally good individual & Treasury (HMT) investment BUT 30,000 fewer first-time FT students (2012): aggregate long-term cost at least £6.6bn

27 Graduate gender and distributional effects
Men RAB increases from 19.5% to 22.5% Average repayment period increases by 11 years Women RAB increases from 31.6% to 53.8% Majority of women will never repay Total of £2.798bn loans (fee + maintenance) written-off

28 Indirect effects Increase in fees = + 0.24% on headline inflation
e.g. CPI of 2.5% increases to 2.74% & continues for 3 cohorts Impact on consumers Rail fares, water bills, repayment of student loans Impact on Treasury Non-working age welfare benefits Interest repayments on index-linked gilts (£655m additional HMT payments) Combined effects of increasing tuition fees 6.5 x more than Treasury savings

29 2012/13 cf. 2010/11 £9,000 fee cf. £3,290 fee £3.93bn extra in loans provided by HMT Of these additional loans, RAB charge of 62% (only a third recouped)

30 Resource Accounting Budgeting (RAB)
2010/11 RAB of 26.1% on £6.42bn of maintenance and fee loans Govt. would recoup 73.9% (£4.74bn) over 25 years 2012/13 Positive real rate of interest, repayment period 30 years BUT increase in fee cap and loans RAB of 39.6% on £10.35bn loan book for smaller cohort For every £1,000 only £604 recouped over 30 years 

31 Alternative options: Annual tuition fee capped at £6000 Graduate tax

32 Medium-Term Challenges
Deregulation of student numbers Sale of student loan book A Ponzi system of finance and funding ? Research funding ? Impact of a general election and a post-election spending review ( )? £9k £9k £?k Sir Alan Langlands, Higher Education Funding Council for England, 18 April 2013

33 follow us on @million_plus
The university think-tank working to solve complex problems in higher education follow us on @million_plus


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