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Business schools fear they are next target in senior pay furore

Dean says that institutions may have to rely on part-time staff if they cannot match industry remuneration

Published on
June 13, 2018
Last updated
June 13, 2018
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University business schools may have to rely on part-time academics if the furore over senior pay within higher education shifts towards the discipline, a sector leader has claimed.

Francisco Veloso, dean of Imperial College Business School, said that business schools have generally justified high salaries for their leaders and top academics on the basis that 鈥渢hey still tend to be the most significant 鈥 on a per professor basis 鈥 contributors to the rest of the university in terms of financial contributions鈥.

He added that it is common for companies to headhunt business academics to work on projects within industry.

While, as a business school leader, these arrangements have to be managed 鈥渟o it doesn鈥檛 compromise their academic integrity鈥, it also 鈥渢ells me that effectively my faculty could be out there working in the business sector making more money than they do at the school鈥, he said.

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However, Professor Veloso said that the pay model used by business schools may have to change if they become the next target of the debate around executive pay in higher education and their high salaries are 鈥渟een as not adequate or reasonable from the point of view of society鈥.

鈥淲ith these types of issues it is hard to guess where they [will] land,鈥 he said during an interview with 探花视频.

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THE鈥檚 latest UK vice-chancellors鈥 pay survey, published in February, found that the former dean of London Business School was the third highest paid higher education leader in 2016-17, when pension payments were excluded 鈥 Sir Andrew Likierman鈥檚 basic pay was 拢448,000, lower only than that for Dame Glynis Breakwell, vice-chancellor of the University of Bath, and Christina Slade, vice-chancellor of Bath Spa University, whose聽拢679,000 salary included 拢429,000 in 鈥渃ompensation for loss of office鈥. Salary data for deans employed within universities is typically not released.

Professor Veloso said that if business school pay becomes an issue that is 鈥減ressed to the limit鈥 then the only solution would be for business schools to 鈥渟top having proper full-time faculty鈥 and instead have people in part-time positions who also worked within industry.

鈥淚s that the best thing for the academic mission? I鈥檓 not sure it is. That is the difficult balance here,鈥 he said.

He added that business schools could also move towards the model that is used by medical schools, whereby the pay of academics who also do clinical work in the NHS is based on NHS pay scales.

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Professor Veloso said this arrangement means that 鈥渋t is the practitioners that pay the difference of the salary rather than the university鈥. 聽

鈥淚 think it is a conversation perhaps to have. And [we should] think about the trade-off that exists in having a different model, if we don鈥檛 think that [our current pay structure is] the right model to have,鈥 he said.

ellie.bothwell@timeshighereducation.com

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