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Part-time postgraduate support scrapped in Wales

Institutions face losing up to a quarter of their total funding council grant as cuts from Welsh government bite

Published on
May 23, 2016
Last updated
July 13, 2016
Cutting daffodils back
Source: Alamy

Funding council support for part-time postgraduate study in Wales has been scrapped in the wake of government spending cuts.

The 拢6.5 million fund that was in the past distributed to universities annually by the Higher Education Funding Council for Wales was removed after the Cardiff government reduced the organisation鈥檚 budget by 拢11 million.

In total, Hefcw plans to allocate 拢132.3 million to institutions in 2016-17. The amount of quality related research funding remains unchanged for the fifth year in a row at 拢71.1 million, while support for postgraduate research training, part-time undergraduate provision and higher cost full-time undergraduate courses stays largely the same year-on-year.

However, Hefcw warned that institutions could face a further in-year cut if the Welsh government withholds as much as 拢21.1 million of its 2016-17 budget. Ministers have said that they would use this to fund any increase in the cost of the tuition fee grant that subsidises Welsh students鈥 undergraduate studies in Wales and in the rest of the UK.

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This is currently budgeted at 拢236.7 million but, if it went over this, Hefcw says that it would be forced to make further cuts to support for expensive undergraduate courses and, potentially, research and part-time funding.

Welsh institutions have expressed concern about the amount of funding that is being used to support students being charged 拢9,000 tuition fees at English universities.

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David Blaney, Hefcw鈥檚 chief executive, said that the review of student finance in Wales being led by Sir Ian Diamond would 鈥渂e critical to informing a future policy that provides a sustainable balance of investment between Welsh students and Welsh higher education providers鈥.

The loss of support for part-time postgraduate study means that some Welsh universities face significant percentage cuts in their total Hefcw funding. Cardiff Metropolitan University is set to lose 25.7 per cent of its grant (拢623,000), while Glyndwr University will lose 20.4 per cent (拢803,000).

The biggest loser in absolute terms is Cardiff University, which will see its funding reduced by 拢2 million (3.4 per cent).

鈥淚 cannot stress it enough: government expenditure on higher education is not just a cost, it is an investment in the future of Wales,鈥 Dr Blaney said. 鈥淯niversities are employers, educators, influencers and investors. Successful universities are an essential part of a strong and prosperous nation.鈥

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chris.havergal@tesglobal.com

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