In 2007, David Eastwood, then chief executive of the Higher Education Funding Council for England, said that in devising the research excellence framework the funding bodies were 鈥渁s committed to lightening the burden as we are to rigour in assessing quality鈥. Yet earlier this month we learned that the 2014 REF cost an estimated four times as much as the 2008 research assessment exercise (鈥REF 2014 cost almost 拢250 million鈥, 13 July).
According to the , the REF cost the funding bodies 拢14听million and universities 拢232听million. About 拢19听million of the latter amount (8听per cent) was for REF panellists鈥 time, leaving 拢212听million (92听per cent) as the cost of submission.
Of that, preparing impact case studies cost 拢55 million, but the review chooses to discount this figure when comparing the costs of the REF and the RAE. Believing the to be 鈥渁 conservative estimate鈥, the review revises it up to 拢66 million. Comparing this with the 拢157 million spend on submitting outputs to the REF, it concludes that 鈥渢he cost of submitting to the last RAE was roughly 43 per cent of the cost of submitting to the REF鈥. Or to put it another way, submission costs for the REF were about 238听per cent higher than for the RAE.
But the fact remains that higher education institutions did incur an additional 拢55听million in real costs of preparing impact submissions, which were a mandatory element of the exercise. If impact is included in the calculation, the increase in submission costs rises to about 321听per cent.
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The figures also reveal that, contrary to the perceptions of the higher education institutions surveyed for the report, the increased cost of the REF was not 鈥渕ainly鈥 because of听the new impact element.
鈥淭he strengthening of equality and diversity measures, in relation to individual staff circumstances鈥 is also singled out. This is the only place in the report where an item is identified as 鈥渁 disproportionately costly element of the whole process鈥 (my emphasis). But the document also notes that dealing with special circumstances 鈥渢ook an average 11 per cent of the total central management time devoted to REF鈥 and 鈥渃onsumed around 1 per cent of the effort鈥 at departmental level. This amounts to 拢6 million (or 4 per cent) of institutions鈥 拢157 million non-impact submission costs 鈥 a drop in the ocean.
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We are left, then, with an increase in submission costs of about 拢85 million that is听not attributable to changes in the formal submission requirements. According to the review, 鈥渢he REF element on research outputs, which included time spent reviewing and negotiating the selection of staff and publications鈥 was 鈥渢he main cost driver鈥 for institutions, with some running 鈥渢wo or three formal mock REFs, with the final [one] leading directly into the REF submission鈥.
But it nowhere explains why this element should have consumed so much more staff time in 2014 than it did in 2008. The most likely explanation lies in a factor the review does not even mention: Hefce鈥檚 changes to the quality-related funding formula in 2010鈥11, which defunded 2* outputs. At that point, in the words of Adam Tickell, who was then pro vice-chancellor for research and knowledge transfer at the University of Birmingham, universities 鈥渉ad no rational reason to submit people who haven鈥檛 got at least one 3* piece of work鈥. More importantly, they had an incentive to eliminate every 2* (or lower) output from their submissions because these would lower their ranking without any compensatory gain in income. Mock REF 鈥渋terative processes鈥 were designed for this purpose. This competition is only likely to intensify given Hefce鈥檚 further 鈥渢weaking鈥 of the QR funding formula in February, which changed the weighting of 3* to 4* outputs from 3:1 to 4:1.
Many have argued that the human costs of this competition are inordinately high, and the review confesses that it 鈥渄oes not include an estimate of non-time related burdens on staff, such as the stress on staff arising from whether they would be selected for the REF鈥. What is clear is that there is an exorbitant financial cost as well. The review argues that this cost is 鈥渓ess than 1 per cent鈥 of total public expenditure on research and 鈥渞oughly 2.4 per cent of the 拢102 billion in research funds expected to be distributed by the UK鈥檚 funding bodies鈥 over the next six years. But this latter figure is misleading since some elements of the funding bodies鈥 research budget are distributed without reference to the REF. Once these are excluded the figure rises to about 3.3 per cent. By comparison, 鈥渢he funding bodies estimated the costs of the 2008 RAE in England to be around 0.5 per cent of the value of public research funding that was subsequently allocated with reference to its results鈥. If this is supposed to be a measure of cost-efficiency, REF 2014 scores very much worse.
When considering the cost-effectiveness of the exercise, we would also do well to remember that the considerable sums of money currently devoted to paying academics to sit on committees to decide which of their colleagues should be excluded, in the interest of securing their university a marginal (and in听many cases misleading) advantage in the league tables, could be spent in the classroom, the library and the lab. The QR funding formula has set up a听classic prisoner鈥檚 dilemma, in which what may appear 鈥渞ational鈥 behaviour for ambitious research-intensive institutions has toxic consequences for the system as a whole.
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Derek Sayer is professor of history at Lancaster University.
POSTSCRIPT:
Print headline: Do not resuscitate: the REF is a drain on precious resources
A longer version of this article can be viewed at:
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