UK Universities Warn of Cuts to Hardship Funds for Impoverished Students
UK Universities Warn of Cuts to Student Hardship Funds

Vice-chancellors have indicated that they may need to reduce hardship support for impoverished students and scale back outreach activities aimed at disadvantaged groups if the dire funding challenges facing universities continue. The anonymous poll conducted by Universities UK (UUK) reveals the extent of the budgetary crisis in higher education, with more than two-thirds of leaders prepared to implement compulsory redundancies over the next three years, while nearly 90% are considering hiring freezes or voluntary redundancies.

Concerns Over Student Support

Vivienne Stern, UUK's chief executive, stated: "If we want to retain world-class universities that deliver for students, employers and the economy, a serious conversation is needed about how degrees are funded and whether the governments' share matches the value universities deliver for society." However, experts warn that further cuts to student support could make higher education inaccessible for those who most need it, especially as record numbers of students are living at home and working part-time to cope with rising costs.

Nearly a third of vice-chancellors said they would cut hardship funding for current students if necessary, while more than half indicated they were prepared to reduce access and outreach activities intended to encourage university attendance over the next three years. Lee Elliot-Major, a professor of social mobility at the University of Exeter, commented: "A retreat from access and hardship funding risks pulling up the ladder on a whole generation at a time when growing numbers of students are facing unprecedented financial pressures and increasing uncertainty about the value of a degree. It would represent a huge waste of human potential at precisely the moment the country can least afford it. We're in real danger of returning to an era in which university once again becomes the preserve of those advantaged enough to afford it."

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Impact on Disadvantaged Students

Katy Hampshire, director of programmes at the Sutton Trust, emphasised that cutting hardship funds could dramatically affect the lives of the poorest students. "They're more likely to have skipped meals to save on food costs, and missed lectures or deadlines to undertake paid work. They also graduate with the highest levels of student debt compared to their more affluent peers. This is fundamentally unfair. Cutting hardship support would hit those with the least financial support hardest, and risk undermining their ability to succeed once they reach university." She added that cutting work on participation and outreach "risks widening access gaps between the most and least affluent young people that universities have spent years trying to close."

Broader Cuts and Mergers

The vice-chancellors surveyed said that cuts could occur across the board if financial conditions worsen, including to research, buildings, and maintenance. Many are also considering mergers or partnerships with other universities. Earlier this month, King's College London announced it will absorb Cranfield University, a technology and management postgraduate institution based in Bedfordshire, signalling that consolidation could become more common.

Jo Grady, general secretary of the University and College Union, said: "Mergers and takeovers are not a solution to this crisis, they are a symptom. The governments and vice-chancellors now urgently need to listen to university staff, invest in jobs, shore up capacity and re-establish the UK as a global higher education leader." Alex Stanley, the National Union of Students' vice president for higher education, stressed that it is vital for universities to make protecting their students a top priority. "For the students, this comes alongside maintenance loans that haven't kept in line with inflation while their costs, and their debts, continue to grow at astronomical rates," Stanley said.

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