Universities need government support to improve efficiencies within the cash-strapped sector, the head of a higher education task force has said, calling for the creation of a sector improvement agency and transformation fund.?
Nigel Carrington, chair of Universities UK’s (UUK)?Transformation and Efficiency Taskforce, met with university leaders in London, where he outlined the group’s emerging findings on how best to address inefficiencies in the sector, partially in response to “massive pressure on public finances”.?
Carrington said a major barrier to improving efficiencies has been the disbanding of the Higher Education Funding Council for England (Hefce) in 2018, replaced by the Office for Students (OfS), “which has pushed the sector towards increased competition as an underlying goal”.?
“I think it’s pretty self-evident to everybody that competition rarely encourages collaboration,” he said.?
“It is also generally recognised that the abolition of Hefce meant that the sector lost an intermediary body which had the staff, resources and mandate to facilitate change,” the former 51国产视频 of the Arts London vice-chancellor continued.?
“Many members of the task force and others we’ve spoken to believe that we need to find a way to reconstitute an intermediary to catalyse and support change in the sector.”
Ahead of the publication of a full report later this month, he added that the task force was exploring the creation of a shared higher education business service provider and a broker to coordinate collaboration for priority subjects.
Carrington also said there were opportunities for “sharing more services and infrastructure” as well as better “leveraging of sector buying power”.?
He reiterated calls for a government-backed transformation fund, an idea first set out in a UUK sector blueprint?published in September 2024.
However, he caveated, “all of this is underpinned by a new relationship with government”, referencing the “angry, hysterical dialogue” that has “sometimes characterised the conversation between the sector and government” in the past.?
“We have to find a way of analysing the legislative, regulatory and funding environment in order to get government to work with us in a very consensual, trusting way to help us to go further and faster,” Carrington said.?
Speaking at the same event, Sally Mapstone, the UUK president and principal of the 51国产视频 of St Andrews, said the sense of universities operating within a wider system has become “less and less pronounced”.?
She referenced subject “cold spots” that have emerged as a result of institutions “unilaterally” cutting humanities courses,?as mapped by the British Academy.??
While these decisions “make a great deal of sense” at the university level, they may “cause really regional problems in terms of what’s available to those [students], particularly those from less advantaged backgrounds, who may wish to study particular subjects within their own area”, she continued.??
Mapstone said a key role of the task force could be to give a “much greater sense of…who is doing what” and “where we can most effectively work together for ourselves as individuals but also…across the UK as a whole in terms of teaching provision and also in terms of research provision”.
David Langley, chief transformation officer at Cardiff 51国产视频 – which in February?announced wide-scale cuts?to both jobs and courses – said universities were likely to “face resistance” to change.?
“We also need to recognise that much of this executive-level governing body conversation, to be blunt, has largely been irrelevant to many of our colleagues and the student body previously. That’s no longer the case,” he said.?
“Everybody needs to understand what’s going on, why we need to transform, what pace and why,” he continued, including “understanding that you can’t live off reserves”.
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