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JONATHAN SIMONS POLICY EXCHANGE

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JONATHAN SIMONS POLICY EXCHANGE. HE reform 2010-2015– problems solved or problems delayed?. Jonathan Simons Head of Education, Policy Exchange @PXEducation. Browne and associated reforms in English HE system. Fees capped at £9k; any fee over £6k should be partially invested in fair access - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: JONATHAN SIMONS POLICY EXCHANGE

JONATHAN SIMONS

POLICY EXCHANGE

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Policy Exchange is an independent, non-partisan educational charity seeking free market and localist solutions to public policy questions. Charity Registration Number 1096300.

HE reform 2010-2015– problems solved or problems delayed?

Jonathan SimonsHead of Education, Policy Exchange

@PXEducation

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Browne and associated reforms in English HE system

• Fees capped at £9k; any fee over £6k should be partially invested in fair

access

• Repayments start at £21k with write off after 30 years

• Return of means tested grants

• New duty on schools to provide independent, impartial careers guidance.

All universities to provide Key Information Sets

• Core and margin with reallocation of place to high quality institutions

charging below £7,500

• No student number controls on AAB students (since changed to ABB, and

student number controls to be abolished entirely from 2015-16)

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Scottish HE system

• 4 year courses rather than 3 (some RUK students can enter in Y2)

• Differential tuition fees for students from Scotland and EU as opposed to

England, Wales, N Ireland (RUK) – who are charged up to the same £9k as

in England

• “Rocks will melt in the sun” before Scottish students charged tuition fees

under SNP Government

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Welsh HE system

• Welsh Government have protected the cuts to teaching grant to 12% to

universities in Wales (against 80% in England) but also raised tuition fee cap

to £9k

• Welsh students studying in Wales or England were eligible for subsidy to

deal with higher fees – tuition fees capped at £3,575 wherever they study,

which costs the Welsh Government around £4,500 per student annually.

Figures show a move of Welsh students to English universities

• Sir Ian Diamond undertaking consultation into higher education funding in

Wales, but not due to report back until 2016

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Problems solved?

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HE funding (England)

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Student numbers across UK

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Student numbers across UK

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Student satisfaction

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Problems delayed?

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Already calls for more funding increases

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...at the same time as some political desire to cut them again

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What about non first time full time undergraduates?

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Is the current system in the UK sustainable? England

Total value of outstanding loans (including interest) is currently £46 billion. It is projected to top out at £200bn by 2042 in 2013 prices)

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Is the current system in the UK sustainable? England

NAO found that of the current loan book, BIS estimate 35% will never be repaid, and up to 50% of post 2012 loans will not. However, worth remembering that this is the point (and consequence) of a deliberate policy decision

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Is the current system in the UK sustainable? Scotland

• So much hangs on what might happen post independence referendum

• If yes:

• Most pertinently, the future of the differential tuition fee policy – would it be

legal?

• What about research council income

• Future student flows and staff flows

• Potential £9.8bn shortfall in USS pension scheme (analogy of Academy status in

schools in pertinent here)

• If no:

• Is the differential tuition fee policy affordable – and is it value for money? Look at

student increases in different nations of the UK

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Is the current system in the UK sustainable? Wales

• Will Diamond review mean the end of the tuition fee subsidy for Welsh students?

£35m annually going outside of Wales (mostly to England)

• Will we see more M+A activity amongst institutions to strengthen overall quality

(Cardiff ranked 29th in UK, highest in Wales, and only three Welsh institutions in top

100)

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Conclusions

• Lots of change, particularly in England and Wales, since 2010

• On surface, system looks positive in England and Scotland

• But overall lots of issues remain to be resolved

• Is the English system affordable to the Exchequer, and specifically to BIS. Will a

graduate tax come in and if so how on earth will it be managed. Will fees rise

along with new students?

• Will the Scottish system survive in its current form post any yes vote in

independence? And if a no vote, will a non SNP government look at introducing

fees for Scottish students?

• How can Wales ensure better value for money? And should they focus on Welsh

students, or the Welsh system?

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Conclusions

• There will be a ‘conspiracy of silence’ amongst parties in UK General Election in 2015

• In Independence referendum in 2014 and Welsh Assembly elections in 2016 it will be

debated more intently but in absence of many proven facts....

• We may well have to have – reluctantly – another major review in all three nations,

especially England, midway through next Parliament

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JONATHAN SIMONS

POLICY EXCHANGE