Source: Science Photo Library
Dangerous procedure: the plans to shift the medical education budget to the DoH could lead to cuts to per-student spending
Leading university figures have raised the alarm about the plans being mooted to move medical education and research budgets across Whitehall in a bid to avoid huge spending cuts to the academy.
The proposals to shift the budgets from the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills to the Department of Health are said to be part of last-minute efforts to achieve the 10 per cent reduction in BIS spending reportedly being called for by the Treasury, which would amount to a 拢1.5 billion cut.
Transferring the cash for medical education from the Higher Education Funding Council for England to the DoH could save around 拢300 million from BIS鈥 budget, 探花视频 estimates.
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Meanwhile, moving responsibility for the Medical Research Council鈥檚 resource budget could save an extra 拢575 million if funding continued at 2014-15 levels.
The plans follow similar proposals from other under-pressure areas of government spending, such as defence and social care, to shift funding into the protected streams of health and international development, which are likely to continue to be exempt from cuts.
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Sir Steve Smith, vice-chancellor of the University of Exeter and former president of Universities UK, said he could see the 鈥渟uperficial appealing nature of the logic鈥 behind the transfer route, but said it looked too good to be true 鈥渂ecause it is鈥.
Despite being protected, the DoH budget is already being squeezed because of the rapidly rising costs of providing healthcare for an ageing population, he said.
鈥淭he danger is medical education and research go into a budget under the most extraordinary pressure,鈥 Sir Steve said, with the money likely to be 鈥渆aten away and used for front-line delivery鈥.
There were no guarantees that the DoH would receive corresponding increases to pay for the transfers, he added, and it might be forced to absorb the streams into its already pressurised budget. This could lead to cuts to the sums currently spent on medical education: more than 拢10,000 per year per student by Hefce in 2013-14.
A source familiar with the negotiations said the proposals were not thought to advocate moving provision away from universities.
However, if that 鈥渁t-worst鈥 scenario were to happen, it could result in 鈥渄isassociating medical education from research and the university structure鈥.
An 鈥榠ll-advised鈥 transfusion
Meanwhile, sector figures have responded critically to rumours about moving the MRC budget to the DoH. The dean of one medical school said that merging the council and the DoH鈥檚 National Institute for Health Research budgets would be 鈥渋ll-advised鈥.
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The dean stressed the differences between the 鈥渄esign, implementation, outputs and evaluation鈥 of biomedical science and applied healthcare research. Combining the two would lead to inequity in funding, which 鈥渨ould ultimately be detrimental to the provision of the highest-quality healthcare鈥.
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Andy Westwood, chief executive of GuildHE, said that while shifting responsibility for medical research - something likely to be seen as a priority wherever it sits - may in the short term seem like a 鈥済ood political and economic wheeze鈥, he doubted it would stop cuts elsewhere in BIS.
鈥淎nd of course, it鈥檚 a high-stakes gamble, giving up a jewel in the crown in both research and industrial-strategy terms,鈥 he added.
On Twitter, Richard Horton, editor-in-chief of The Lancet, said that Sir John Savill, chief executive of the MRC, was apparently against the proposal, with the council preferring a 10 per cent budget cut to a merger.
鈥淭hey want to preserve their independence at all costs,鈥 he added.
Kieron Flanagan, lecturer in science and technology policy and management at Manchester Business School, said he would be surprised if the MRC move went ahead, although a 鈥渉alfway house鈥 option was possible.
In this scenario, the DoH might share or contribute funding for medical research and education without a wholesale move, similar to how it stumped up 拢200 million in capital costs for the Francis Crick Institute in 2010.
The proposals to shift medical spending from BIS come on the back of concerns that the savings the department must make will force cuts either to the 拢4.6 billion science 鈥渞ing fence鈥 or the 拢300 million 鈥渟tudent opportunity鈥 fund.
The coalition鈥檚 spending review for 2015-16 will be unveiled on 26 June.
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