Most UK research council funds spent outside south-east

Improved grant success in UK regions reverses funding dominance of London and broader south-east, though disparities remain, says study

March 11, 2025
Two white on blue signs for the UK National Cycle Route 1 in Lerwick, Shetland, Scotland, UK - one pointing North, the other pointing South. stock photo
Source: iStock/Alan Morris

Research councils awarded more funding to UK regions outside London and the south-east for the first time, new analysis into regional investment disparities shows.

According to a new breakdown of how UK Research and Innovation (UKRI) invested a total of £9.1 billion in public money in 2023-24, £4.614 billion was allocated to areas outside London, the south-east and the east of England, collectively known as the “Greater south-east”, marginally more than the £4.550 billion awarded to institutions within the UK capital and Greater south-east. In essence, this means there was broadly a 50-50 split in research funding between the UK’s Greater south-east and the rest of the country.

That compares with 49 per cent of funds going outside the Greater south east in 2022-23 and 47 per cent in 2021-22, says the study published on 10 March.

This increase was driven by significantly improved grant success in the east Midlands, west Midlands, the north-east and south-west, all of which saw UKRI income increase by more than inflation (13 per cent) between 2021-22 and 2023-24.

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In contrast, institutions in London and the south-east increased their overall grant income by less than inflation over this period, the study says.

The closing of the research funding gap follows a pledge by the UK government in 2022 to “level up” UK research funding by growing public research spending outside the Greater south-east by 40 per cent by 2030. It also vowed to increase the proportion of all government R&D spending going outside the south-east to 55 per cent by the end of 2023-24.

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Source: 
UKRI: Geographical distribution of UKRI funding, financial years 2022 to 2023 and 2023 to 2024

While the percentage of UKRI funding heading outside the Greater south-east has increased significantly in the past two years, the study points out that regional disparities are still stark if per-capita funding is considered.

For every person living in the Greater south-east, UKRI invested £183 in 2023-24 compared to £106 per person outside it. For Scotland, that figure was £101 per person, in Wales it was £53 and Northern Ireland it was £45 – about a third of the UK average of £134 per person.

Overall, £8.4 billion of UKRI’s spending went to English institutions in 2023-24, with £552 million heading to Scotland, £168 million to Wales and £87 million to Northern Ireland.

jack.grove@timeshighereducation.com

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