Slow cuts or risk lasting harm, staff warn stricken universities

Institutions ‘caught between a rock and hard place’ are attempting wholesale transformations of their operations but those affected claim schemes could be kinder for staff and students

January 30, 2025
Man swinging axe at classical column. To illustrate possible harm to universities from cuts
Source: iStock montage

Universities have been urged to reconsider “unprecedented” cuts planned across the UK sector, or risk facing complaints about declining standards and damaging their reputations both locally and abroad.

Announcing wholesale restructuring programmes in recent days, leaders of major institutions have stressed that they cannot carry on because they are in a financial climate that has plunged even some of the most successful universities into deficit.

But staff at affected institutions have urged caution, saying management teams can go slower in their pursuit of returning to surplus, and lessen the impact on staff and students.

“You simply cannot slash thousands of jobs and expect to offer anything close to the expected standards of research and teaching”, warned Jo Grady, general secretary of the University and College Union (UCU).

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The latest institutions to announce job cuts include Durham University, where 200 professional services jobs are initially expected to go go, initially in a voluntary severance scheme, and Newcastle University, which is cutting 300 roles across the institution.

The University of Kent has said it needs to save another £19.5 million in its latest round of cost-cutting while Cardiff University has unveiled a transformation plan that involves losing 400 academic roles.

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Grady said the cuts “threaten not only the reputation of individual institutions, but UK higher education’s standing on the world stage”.

Similar concerns have been echoed in the research sphere. Beth Thompson, executive director of policy and partnerships at the Wellcome Trust, an important funder, warned that the instability “not only threatens the UK’s world-renowned role as a leader in science but also the country’s ambitions for long-term economic growth”.

But it is local communities where the impact will be felt the hardest. A proposal to close Cardiff’s nursing school has drawn particular criticism, coming at a time when the NHS is looking to address staff shortages and universities are being asked to pivot into more professional training to meet the needs of their local areas.

Helen Whyley, executive director of the Royal College of Nursing Wales, said the “closure of such a prestigious institution will have a significant impact on the future of nursing in Wales” and “undermines efforts to address the critical staffing crisis in the NHS and social care”.

A Welsh government statement also singled out the nursing cuts, saying it was “disappointed” in the move and was taking “urgent” steps to ensure the overall number of nurses trained in Wales is not affected.

A Cardiff spokesperson stressed that there would be no immediate impact on current nursing students, or those due to start courses in 2025.

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“We are acutely aware of our role in delivering the next generation of healthcare professionals for Wales and beyond and are actively consulting with all stakeholders on our proposals,” they added.

Cefin Campbell, education spokesperson for Plaid Cymru, said the knock-on impact of the cuts would be “devastating” for Cardiff and across Wales and called on the Labour-run Welsh government to “put our universities on a sustainable financial footing”.

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On a national level, UCU’s Grady called on the Westminster government to “do all it can to make institutions think again or it will be accused of standing on the sidelines while UK higher education crumbles”.

But ministers have recently ruled out injecting large amounts of public funding into the system, with small incremental fee rises seemingly the best institutions can hope for in the coming spending review.

University leaders have justified their plans by saying that their institutions must adjust to this new reality of lower funding, and it is better to undertake extensive restructuring now rather than repeated disruptive cuts.

But staff say that the schemes could be kinder. Cardiff’s UCU branch has highlighted how at the root of the institution’s cuts is a “self-imposed plan to chase a 12 per cent surplus on the budget”. Given the institution’s large cash reserves, the branch has argued for a “more gradual recovery”.

Many universities “seem to be caught between a rock and a hard place”, noted Gregor Gall, visiting professor in industrial relations at the University of Leeds, with falling international student income and no sizeable increase in government funding.

The “many individual fires” the UCU is fighting – all with their own schedules and dynamics – make it hard to establish a united front against the changes, he said, and pressure needs to extend beyond the individual institutions to a Labour government “unwilling” to act in the current political and economic climate.

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But staff discontent is only likely to intensify amid the carnage, and dissenting voices from students will no doubt get louder too, as they are asked to pay more for what ostensibly is a shrinking service.

tom.williams@timeshighereducation.com

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Reader's comments (5)

Staff will be fired, so can't speak, and students won't sign up because they will be put off by the state of the sector and country. The students will go to stable and decently funded institutions abroad as will the best staff. It is an opportunity, however, for universities to get back to basic functions of teaching and research, and hand control back to academics away from administrators. Cut management teams too. Repairing the UK's academic reputation is a long term job though. I doubt that will be easy if they can't compete globally with so many well funded, newer universities emerging around the world. Too many brilliant people have left or retired recently.
How can leaders be trusted to come up with a resolution to the financial crisis given it was their short sighted and naive strategy which largely caused it in the first place ? They have usually moved on before there is any accountability for their actions , so they will be happy to gamble with these short term fixes. Anybody working in the sector knows what is wrong, managerial bloat and ridiculous levels of bureaucracy and administration used to justify the recruitment of pointless roles significantly increasing staff costs. Labour seem happy just to sit back and let the sector implode and as the poster above has noted we will just be eclipsed by emerging Institutions globally and it wil be difficult to ever recover from this once it has happened.
While certain external factors in the UK economy have exacerbated the crisis that the UK University sector is facing, there are major concerns about how Universities are run internally that is likely to be a much greater problem. The rapidly growing scandal of corruption and abuses towards staff is causing massive, and now likely irreversable, reputational damage. The problem of complete lack of accountability for managers and HR that are responsible for this must be addressed first (see https://21percent.org/?page_id=35). Why would our politicians have any sympathy for a sector in this state...
We need to bring back tenure contracts for professors and cap VC and PVC salaries at that of a professor and no more. It takes far more skill to be a top physics professor than it does to be a globe trotting gravy train VC. The grace and favour mansions like the one Max Lu lives in on a 600 acre university farm need to go and all the first class travel needs to stop with VC's focus on their local communit. There is no excuse for VCs to be going off to COP etc. All travel should be economy and only for those doing actual research. VC's should all have a 3 year term limit and be banned from being a VC more than once.
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And all this happening when the government announces an Oxford-Cambridge corridor to become the UK's Silicon Valley. What's that going to do to address regional inequalities other than by widening them? With academic staff being sacked or taking early retirement in the North of the country, there'll be a warm welcome in the South it seems for those with the requisite skills and interests.

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