Universities need gimmick-free funding, says UCU
12 February 2007
UCU said this morning that the government needs to commit 'gimmick-free' state funding to UK universities.
Responding to reports that the Prime Minister will announce plans later this week for government money to boost university donations from former students and business, UCU joint general secretary, Sally Hunt, said: 'There is little doubt that our universities are seriously under-funded and it is encouraging that the Government has recognised the problem. Any extra money is to be welcomed, but the obsession with cherry picking parts of the American model is not the way forward.
'There is not the same culture in this country of former students donating to their alma mater. If the government wishes to follow examples from the States we would suggest they start by looking at government spending on higher education as a proportion of Gross Domestic Product (GDP).
'What the country desperately needs from the government is a clear public commitment to higher education through greater public investment. The fact is that while government is interfering more in the running of universities, it is paying proportionately less and this is the worst of both worlds. Our world class universities need real support not gimmicks.'
International comparisons
Public funding on higher education as a proportion of Gross Domestic Product (GDP) is lower in the UK than America and lower than the OECD and European averages. Since 1995 overall public investment in higher education in the UK has increased at half the rate of the OECD average, and also at half the rate of investment in our schools.
Public spending on higher education as a percentage of GDP:
United States 1.2
OECD average 1.1
European average 1.1
United Kingdom 0.8
- PrintPrint this page
- Share
Comments