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Regulator should protect university finances, says academy head

British Academy president Julia Black contrasts creation of funding-focused football regulator with inaction on higher education crisis

Published on
April 26, 2024
Last updated
April 26, 2024
Football referee
Source: iStock/pkripper503

UK higher education needs a new regulator charged with protecting the financial resilience of universities, according to the president of the British Academy.

, Julia Black, a former interim director of the London School of Economics, contrasts the Westminster government鈥檚 creation of a football regulator 鈥撀爓hich will have a duty to 鈥減rotect and promote financial sustainability of individual clubs鈥 鈥 with perceived inaction on the funding crisis facing higher education institutions.

As reported in 探花视频, more than 50 UK universities are now making redundancies聽and course closures are putting the 鈥渉ealth of individual disciplines鈥 at risk, Professor Black warns. Concerns persist that the unsustainable funding model 鈥 undermined by frozen tuition fees and public funding, and instability over international recruitment 鈥 could lead to institutions going bust.

鈥淕overnment likes to claim that the UK is a 鈥榮cience superpower鈥欌ut the 鈥榮uperpower鈥 rhetoric masks the fact that our higher education system is in crisis. The public funding model for both teaching and research is under severe strain, if not broken,鈥 Professor Black writes.

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Professor Black, now LSE鈥檚 strategic director of innovation and a professor of law, says that universities are 鈥渟ignificantly impacted by government terms around the funding of both teaching and research, and increasingly on their operations鈥, but with responsibility for the sector split between the Department for Education and the Department for Science, Innovation and Technology, 鈥渢here isn鈥檛 one part of government which looks at our higher education system as just that, a system, or which is responsible for the cumulative impacts of its often divergent policies鈥.

鈥淭he main regulator in England, the Office for Students (OfS), regulates universities鈥 teaching provision and increasingly other aspects of life on campus, like new provisions on free speech. Yet, notwithstanding their clear public benefit, the OfS, unlike the new football regulator, has no responsibility to 鈥榩romote and protect鈥 the financial resilience of the university system; nor does any other part of government,鈥 Professor Black says.

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鈥淲e need an urgent review and thorough overhaul of the way government engages with universities, including a robust, independent regulator responsible for the system as a whole 鈥 both teaching and research.鈥

Professor Black says that universities need 鈥渃oherent鈥 policies from the government, including on immigration and security, 鈥渨hich recognises that the key to the strength of our universities is their international character鈥.

鈥淚f we are at all interested in maintaining the health and viability of universities, let alone hope it retains the globally strong position it still has, then the UK government needs to start to take the survival of our research and higher education system as seriously as it seems to be taking football. It鈥檚 more than a game,鈥 Professor Black concludes.

chris.havergal@timeshighereducation.com

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Reader's comments (2)

I disagree with Professor Black鈥檚 understanding of this subject. The vast majority of the schedule used by the Office For Students is about financial stability of the institution, plus consumer rights, eg necessity for complaints process etc. By contrast, the biggest omission is anything that shows even a cursory understanding of education, not least on the actual provision of sufficient education and assessment time to justify tuition fees / ensure workloads don鈥檛 drive discrimination and lack of accessibility. https://medium.com/@alastairmichaelsmith/uks-office-for-students-is-entirely-unfit-for-purpose-in-reform-time-is-of-the-essence-fc36f12198e0 Given Professor Black鈥檚 continued role at LSE, they would do well to get their own university in order before seeking to influence wider regulation. The employer currently fails to meet basic legal obligations to secure employees against excessive work and therefore physical and mental health injuries: as they are not contractually given protection of the maximum working week, nor does that university comply with its legal obligation to plan work accordingly nor monitor hours for violations. This measure is equally part and parcel of operational sustainability. /news/illegal-terms-and-conditions-add-academic-overwork-crisis
Hear , hear.

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