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Friday, 8 March, 2002, 14:19 GMT
Academics warn of job cuts
Oxford
World-class university research attracts cash
University chiefs and lecturers say there will be job losses in England's universities - despite the announcement of an increase in spending on higher education.

The body which allocates money for universities, The Higher Education Funding Council for England (Hefce), has announced an overall increase of 6.8%.

More than £5bn has been pledged to the universities for the new academic year beginning in August.

Universities UK - which represents the vice-chancellors who run the universities - gave a warning of "significant redundancies and course closures".

And lecturers said the distribution of the money earmarked for research would mean cuts in the budgets of individual departments where research was ranked at anything less than international standard.

Click here to see who gets what

The 6.8% overall increase includes a 5.9% rise in research spending and a 1.1% increase in teaching and funding per student.

The announcement affects 131 higher education institutions and 196 further education colleges offering higher education courses in England.

Hefce says the money is enough to fund the equivalent of an extra 23,000 full-time student places.

Spending on attracting students from poorer backgrounds to university is also going up - by £10m.

Departments where research is judged to be of international standard will receive an average increase of 2.5% - maintaining their income after inflation is taken into account.

Those which have done less well will see cuts in funding - of up to 70%.


Today's grant announcement represents a good settlement for this year

Funding council chief, Sir Howard Newby
The Association of University Teachers (AUT) says this means nearly half of all England's universities are facing real-term cuts in their research budgets.

Sally Hunt, the union's assistant general secretary, said: "While it is welcome news that for the second year running there will be a real terms increase in funding per student, this is the clearest statement yet that we are heading for a two-tier university system.

"Despite the overall investment in teaching and widening access there are real threats to jobs and research. This year's settlement will not be able to fund the pay of staff in universities."

Call for more money

Hefce's chief executive, Sir Howard Newby, said: "Today's grant announcement - which for the first time tops £5bn - represents a good settlement for this year.

"After many years of decline, this is the second year in which the rate of funding per student has shown an increase in real terms."

On the issue of reduced funds for research at some institutions, he said the total avilable had gone up but was insufficient to fund fully the better performance measured by the 2001 Research Assessment Exercise (RAE).

"We are committed to build on these excellent results - which demonstrate higher levels of world class research - and will continue to argue strongly for additional funding," he said.

Redundancies

On Wednesday students at one of the most prestigious universities - Durham - occupied a library for a time, in protest at a review of courses there.

Universities UK's president, Professor Roderick Floud, said a significant number of universities now faced a cut in real terms in their total funding - although the figures were difficult to interpret.

He was alarmed by the move to "claw back" money within the year from any institution which did not meet its targets for recruiting students. Previously this happened in the following year.

"The new arrangements impose unsustainable year-on-year changes, which work against sensible planning," he said.

"This will almost certainly mean significant redundancies and course closures."


The table below shows the distribution of funds for teaching and research among English universities:

University £000s Change
Anglia Polytechnic 47,027 5.7%
Aston 27,439 8.4%
Bath 41,270 4.9%
Birkbeck College 25,076 8.1%
Birmingham 103,367 4.4%
Bournemouth 31,657 5.4%
Bradford 34,272 3.3%
Brighton 39,504 6.3%
Bristol 87,706 9.3%
Brunel 45,503 4.0%
Cambridge 136,705 4.2%
Central England in Birmingham 44,425 3.7%
Central Lancashire 60,587 5.0%
City 25,298 5.7%
Coventry 48,684 1.8%
De Montfort 70,409 4.0%
Derby 32,554 2.3%
Durham 60,304 12.7%
East Anglia 36,029 9.6%
East London 39,382 3.1%
Essex 28,608 9.0%
Exeter 43,068 11.5%
Gloucestershire 24,216 3.5%
Goldsmiths College 23,373 5.9%
Greenwich 51,019 1.3%
Hertfordshire 50,699 2.8%
Huddersfield 44,467 4.2%
Hull 40,227 1.3%
Imperial College 116,471 6.1%
Keele 22,721 4.2%
Kent at Canterbury 36,718 2.5%
King's College London 105,223 2.1%
Kingston 50,224 6.2%
Lancaster 41,741 5.0%
Leeds 121,097 5.7%
Leeds Metropolitan 60,413 7.6%
Leicester 48,127 2.2%
Lincoln 34,709 -3.2%
Liverpool 85,774 4.5%
Liverpool John Moores 60,819 3.2%
London Guildhall 35,917 2.6%
Loughborough 53,848 5.5%
Luton 22,964 -7.5%
Manchester 115,142 8.6%
UMIST 36,923 1.3%
Manchester Metropolitan 85,356 2.6%
Middlesex 54,941 2.8%
Newcastle 81,279 5.9%
North London 39,912 1.7%
Northumbria at Newcastle 54,614 4.3%
Nottingham 90,502 8.2%
Nottingham Trent 64,892 1.9%
Open 146,955 4.7%
Oxford 132,386 2.2%
Oxford Brookes 35,564 3.3%
Plymouth 71,806 5.8%
Portsmouth 54,226 4.0%
Queen Mary, London 58,468 3.3%
Reading 47,800 6.6%
Royal Holloway, London 28,645 12.7%
Salford 53,945 4.0%
Sheffield 95,065 7.6%
Sheffield Hallam 69,939 2.8%
Southampton 85,655 11.8%
South Bank 39,943 -3.6%
Staffordshire 51,093 3.4%
Sunderland 38,807 2.9%
Surrey 36,538 9.6%
Surrey Roehampton 19,214 2.5%
Sussex 40,812 2.2%
Teesside 36,284 4.2%
Thames Valley 29,225 4.0%
University College London 134,896 3.7%
Warwick 58,296 10.5%
West University of England, Bristol 60,212 3.6%
Westminster 57,391 3.5%
Wolverhampton 54,382 4.0%
York 39,313 9.6%

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