Values
1.1 Higher education is a great national asset. Its
contribution to the economic and social well‑being of the
nation is of vital importance.
1.2 Its research pushes back the frontiers of human
knowledge and is the foundation of human progress. Its teaching
educates and skills the nation for a knowledge-dominated age.
It gives graduates both personal and intellectual fulfilment.
Working with business, it powers the economy, and its graduates
are crucial to the public services. And wide access to higher
education makes for a more enlightened and socially just society.
1.3 In a fast-changing and increasingly competitive
world, the role of higher education in equipping the labour force
with appropriate and relevant skills, in stimulating innovation
and supporting productivity and in enriching the quality of life
is central. The benefits of an excellent higher education system
are far-reaching; the risk of decline is one that we cannot accept.
Our strengths
1.4 We are rightly proud of higher education in England.
Our universities and colleges have been through a dramatic transformation
over the last quarter-century as participation in higher education
has tripled, and generally have maintained high quality and good
value despite a halving of the unit of funding.
1.5 Universities also make a substantial contribution
to the strength of the national economy. In 1999–2000 they generated
directly and indirectly over £34.8 billion of output and over
562,000 full time equivalent jobs throughout the economy.
This is equivalent to 2.7 per cent of the UK workforce
in employment. For every 100 jobs within the HEIs themselves,
a further 89 were generated through knock-on effects throughout
the economy; and for every £1 million of economic output from
higher education, a further £1.5 million is generated in other
sectors of the economy.1
1.6 Research in higher education has real strengths.
Britain has produced 44 Nobel prize winners in the last 50 years.
With 1 per cent of the world’s population we have an 8 per cent
share of the world’s scientific publications. 13 per cent of the
world’s most highly cited publications are British, which
shows that our research has a strong influence on other work.
We score better than anyone in the world except the USA on
each of these measures (Figure 1). And out of 20 main fields of
scientific research, while the USA with its unsurpassed research
base leads the field in each case, the UK has the second
largest share of citations in 15 areas and comes no lower than fifth
in any discipline. Collaborations with our European partners through
the Framework programmes have already strengthened and extended
our research base very significantly. UK science and technology
have been major beneficiaries of EU funding. And ‘Investing
in Innovation’, the Government’s strategy for science, engineering
and technology, announced significant increases in funding
for research.
Figure 1: Number of world citations of scientific publications
per country, 1981–2000
Source: Office of Science and Technology, 2002

1.7 Most students are satisfied with the standard of
teaching and learning, and British higher education brings
substantial benefits. Ninety-three per cent of full-time first-degree
students are in employment or going on to further study
six months after graduation. Those who have been through
higher education in the UK earn on average 50 per cent more than
those who have not,2 and
the rate of return from higher education in the UK is higher than
in any other OECD country. Our non-completion rate for
first degrees remains just 17 per cent, which is almost the lowest in
the OECD. Britain is a growing and attractive destination in the
highly competitive market for overseas students. In 1962–63 there
were 28,000 overseas students in Great Britain, representing 8
per cent of the student population; by 2001–02 there were about 225,000,
almost 11 per cent.
1.8 Links between universities and business
are strong and growing. The record of our universities and colleges
has been encouraging as measured by business start-ups and other
spin out activity. During 2001, universities created 175 new spin-out
companies, and that number has been increasing rapidly – it averaged
around 70 a year in the five years to 1999–2000.3
They include innovative companies like the
Leeds spin-out Ecertec, which aims to develop smart materials
that will allow, for example, ‘warpable’ wings to change shape
on aircraft. There has also been a sharp increase in the number
of patents filed, up 22 per cent between 1998–99 and 1999–2000,
and the proportion of higher education research income funded
by companies in the UK is also up and is now at a higher level
than even the USA. There are numerous examples of higher education
institutions helping companies to be more innovative and competitive.
For example, Exeter University provides product development facilities
which have assisted more than 300 small firms. And institutions
now offer a wide range of courses to provide continuing professional
development to employees in specific firms or business sectors.
Higher education also plays a key role in supporting knowledge
transfer and innovation management in the public sector – for
example, in the NHS.
1.9 Our system has successfully transformed itself
from an elite system – in which, in 1962, only around 6 per
cent those under 214 participated – to one where in England around
43 per cent of those aged between 18 and 30 go to university.
Despite the rise in the numbers participating in higher education,
the average salary premium has not declined over time and remains
the highest in the OECD.5 It is not the case that ‘more
means worse’.
1.10 At the same time universities have changed the nature
of their provision to reflect the changing demands of students.
Some higher education institutions have gone out of their way to
encourage applications from schools and colleges whose students
do not normally participate. Others have embraced new ways of
delivering learning and new types of course to meet the needs
of a wider range of learners. The number of students receiving
qualifications below degree level grew by 39 per cent between
1994–95 and 2001–02, far faster than the increase in the
numbers receiving honours degrees (up by 12 per cent). Part-time
study, where students can combine learning with work, is expanding
too, with 11 per cent of first degree graduates obtaining their
qualification through part-time study, compared to 10 per cent
in 1994–95.6 Eleven per cent of higher education students
are studying in Further Education Colleges, allowing them to learn
near home or work, and providing progression paths through from
earlier study. In 2000/01 21 per cent of students studied
from home, compared to 15 per cent in 1994–95.
The danger of decline
1.11 Higher education in England therefore has a good
story to tell. Nonetheless, the whole system is undoubtedly under
severe pressure and at serious risk of decline. Decisions must
be taken now to maintain the excellence of the sector as a whole.
1.12 The challenges are clear. Many of our economic competitors
invest more in higher education institutions than we do. France,
Germany, the Netherlands and the USA all contribute 1 per cent
of gdp in public funding to higher education institutions, and
Japan is planning to increase public investment from 0.4 per cent
to 1 per cent. This compares to 0.8 per cent in the UK, rising
to approximately 0.9 per cent by 2005 because of our generous
spending review settlement.7 Our competitors see – as we
should – that the developing knowledge economy means the need
for more, better trained people in the workforce. And higher education
is becoming a global business. Our competitors are looking
to sell higher education overseas, into the markets we have traditionally
seen as ours.
1.13 There are challenges internal to higher education
here too:
• to recruit, retain and reward the calibre of academic staff
needed to sustain and improve both teaching and research.
• to maintain the infrastructure for research and teaching.
• to make sure the investment in higher education – whether
paid for by the taxpayer, the student, their employer or someone
else – is used to best effect.
Research
1.14 There is a real danger that our current strength
in the world will not be maintained. The Research Assessment
Exercise, in which research funding through the Higher Education
Funding Council for England (HEFCE) is distributed according to
quality and volume of research, has undoubtedly led to an overall
increase in quality over the last 15 years. But there is growing
competition from other countries. Looking at Nobel prizes, or
at citation rates for scientists, indicates that although our
position is still strong it is declining. And we may not
be making the best use of inevitably limited research funds at
home. International comparisons show that other countries, like
Germany, the Netherlands and the USA (where research and the award
of research degrees is confined to 200 out of 1600 ‘four year’
institutions) concentrate their research in relatively few institutions.
Similarly, the Chinese Government is planning to concentrate research
funds through the creation of ten world-class universities; and
in India there is a national Institute of Technology, on five
sites across the country. This suggests we need to look again
at how our research is organised, and make sure we capture the
benefits of concentration, and that we have a number of institutions
able to compete with the best in the world.
1.15 The Transparency Review, which looked for the first
time at the distribution of expenditure on research and teaching
in HEIs across the UK, showed that research was under-funded,
and the deficit was made up at the expense of investment in the
research infrastructure, or of teaching.8 The effect was particularly
marked in institutions which were not research-intensive. Approximately
half of the higher education estate was built, to relatively low
and inflexible specifications, in the 1960s and early 1970s. Much
of it is nearing the end of its design life, and new requirements
arise from scientific and technological advance, as well as recent
growth in research volumes. The reports commissioned from JM Consulting
by HEFCE9 found that there was an infrastructure backlog of about
£8 billion, consisting of a research infrastructure backlog of
£3.2 billion, and a teaching infrastructure backlog of £4.6 billion,
plus a need to double spending on maintenance.
1.16 And there are continuing concerns about our ability
to recruit, retain and reward the best researchers who provide
the essential research leadership. Although the overall figures
show a ‘brain-gain’ rather than a ‘brain-drain’ in flows of scientists
into and out of the country, figures from the Royal Society support
the hypothesis that the researchers moving out of the country
– typically to the USA – are among our best. A survey of Royal
Society Fellows found that in 1999 26 per cent of Fellows worked
outside the UK (12 per cent in the USA). We need to consider how to
attract and retain the best researchers internationally, and how
to maintain a steady flow of the brightest and best young people
into research.
1.17 Average earnings have risen considerably faster
than academic pay over the last 20 years. Comparing USA and UK
academic salaries, it is striking that the difference in average
salary scales is far smaller than the difference in salaries at
the top end, for the best researchers. This raises questions about
whether our institutions are using salaries to the best possible
effect in recruiting and retaining excellent rsearchers. International
comparisons suggest we should also be thinking hard about whether
institutions could do more to help the best researchers focus
on research, rather than teaching and administrative duties.
Teaching
1.18 Teaching has for too long been the poor relation
in higher education. Promotion for academics is based largely
on research excellence, rather than teaching ability. There is
no respected and defined separate professional career track for
higher education teaching in its own right. Only around 12
per cent of academic staff in higher education are members of
the Institute for Learning and Teaching in Higher Education,
and not all of those necessarily have any formal teaching
qualification. And here again there are recruitment difficulties.
HEFCE’s annual survey10 reveals a recruitment situation
that has steadily deteriorated since the survey was inaugurated
in 1998. Over 60 per cent of institutions reported difficulties
in recruiting lecturers. Recruitment difficulties were particularly
concentrated in certain subjects, notably computing/IT, business-related
subjects, science, engineering, medicine-related subjects and
education.
1.19 Students have insufficient information on how good
the teaching is when applying for courses. And here again there
is a story of decline: staff-student ratios have fallen from just
over 1:10 in 1983 to 1:18 in 2000 and this tends to mean that
students write fewer assignments and have less face-to-face contact
with staff.11 There is too little collaboration between higher
education institutions (HEIs), which can raise standards; support
the development of modules and courses particularly at the introductory
level; and promote the innovative use of ICT and credit accumulation
and transfer.
HE and Business
1.20 The proportion of businesses using
information from HEIs to help with innovation has increased over
recent years, and is now 16 per cent of companies. But this is
still a small minority.12 When universities were asked to
benchmark themselves, fewer than half declared that they had more
than a restricted or partially implemented plan for business support.13
A succession of employer surveys reveals concerns about the skills
of graduates, particularly in terms of communication and other
‘soft’ skills. And although UK institutions are growing stronger
in knowledge transfer, their exploitation of intellectual property
– to take one example – is weak by international standards.14
1.21 These weaknesses are not all of HEIs’ making. Universities
have often experienced difficulties in transferring knowledge
to business through research and development work, and businesses
are often unclear about what they want. And, though the new Regional
Development Agencies are now building graduate-level skills into
their planning, this is in many cases a relatively recent
development. There is clearly scope for the higher education sector
to improve its performance still further and for businesses to
be clearer about what they want from HEIs. This will be informed
by the outcome of the Lambert review, announced by the Chancellor
of the Exchequer in November 2002, which will investigate
ways in which the interactions between universities and businesses
can be enhanced.
Expansion and Flexibility
1.22 Demand for graduates is very strong,
and research shows that 80 per cent of the 1.7 million new jobs
which are expected to be created by the end of the decade will
be in occupations which normally recruit those with higher education
qualifications.15 So
it is in the country’s interest to expand higher education. At
the moment we calculate that the participation rate for English
students in higher education is around 43 per cent of 18–30 year
olds.16 Participation
rates are lower, according to OECD comparisons, than in many other
developed countries, including Australia, Finland, the Netherlands,
New Zealand, Norway and Sweden.
1.23 There is even more catching up to
do when we look at education levels in the existing workforce,
rather than at current entry rates. The proportion of the whole
labour force educated to degree level in the UK is 17 per cent
compared to 28 per cent in the USA.17
1.24 If we want to close the productivity gap we must
close the skills gap, and that in part means boosting higher education.
But we are also convinced that expansion should not mean more
of the same. The pace of both social and technological change
means that education, including higher education, can no longer
be confined to the early years of life. This is truly an era of
lifelong learning. Today’s generation of students will need to
return to learning – full-time or part-time – on more that one
occasion across their lifetime in order to refresh their knowledge,
upgrade their skills and sustain their employability. Such independent
learners investing in the continuous improvement of their skills
will underpin innovation and enterprise in the economy and society.
Lifelong learning therefore implies a fundamental shift from the
‘once in a lifetime’ approach to higher education to one of educational
progression linked to a process of continuous personal and
professional development.
1.25 There is good evidence to suggest that the skills
gap is most acute at a level that is represented by higher education
qualifications below degree level, particularly two-year work-focused
provision. The National Skills Task Force reported that jobs in
the ‘associate professional’ and higher technician level will
experience the greatest growth in the coming years, increasing
by 790,000 up to 2010. And analysis of the Employer Skills Survey
2002 shows that associate professionals and technical occupations
have the highest proportion of skill shortage vacancies relative
to the numbers employed – 1.2 per cent compared to 0.2 per cent
for managers. Shorter, more work-focused courses are also better
suited to a culture of continuous professional development.
1.26 Work-focused courses at these levels have suffered
from social and cultural prejudice against vocational education.
Employers claim that they want graduates whose skills are better
fitted for work; but the labour market premium they pay still
favours traditional three-year honours degrees over two-year work-focused
ones. And students have therefore continued to apply for
three-year honours courses in preference. We must break this cycle
of low esteem, to offer attractive choices to students about the
types of course they can undertake.
1.27 And this is true not just of work-focused provision.
Our system is not good enough at offering students real choice
about how they learn. Higher education should be a choice open
to everyone with the potential to benefit – including older
people in the workforce who want to update their skills. There
are not enough choices for flexible study – including part-time
courses, sandwich courses, distance learning, and e-learning –
and there must be an increasingly rich variety of subjects to
study, which keep pace with changes in society and the economy.
Fair Access to Higher Education
1.28 Universities are a vital gateway to opportunity
and fulfilment for young people, so it is crucial that they continue
to make real and sustained improvements in access. The
social class gap among those entering higher education is unacceptably
wide. Those from the top three social classes are almost three
times as likely to enter higher education as those from the bottom
three. Figure 2, below, is even more disturbing, because it shows
that the gap has widened. At the extremes, the picture is
worse. Young people from professional backgrounds are over five times
more likely to enter higher education than those from unskilled
backgrounds.
Figure 2: Higher Education entrants by social class groups
(1960–2000)

1.29 This state of affairs cannot be tolerated in a civilised
society. It wastes our national talent; and it is inherently socially
unjust. We know that the roots of inequality are deep – in the
education system, social class differences show themselves from
the very earliest years. We are tackling them throughout the education
system and beyond, knowing that the most important factor in getting
access to higher education is earlier results at school or college.
But we cannot allow this to be an excuse for failing to take decisive
action to improve access to higher education. We must do everything
that can be done to make sure that everyone who has the potential
to benefit from a university education has the opportunity to
do so.
1.30 And our access difficulties occur despite having
a level of public spending on financial aid to students (including
student loans) as a percentage of total public expenditure on
higher education that is the highest in the OECD – 36 per cent
in the UK, compared with 8 per cent in France, 19 per cent
in Canada and 30 per cent in Sweden.
Funding
1.31 Underlying each of these policy
challenges is a funding challenge. The graph below (figure 3)
shows that although publicly planned funding for higher education
has risen dramatically under this Government, the decline in the
unit of funding was only reversed in 2000–01. We saw a drop of
36 per cent in funding per student between 1989 and 1997.18
We have outlined, above, the funding challenges that come from
wanting a world-class research operation; and we know that there
is an infrastructure backlog in both teaching and research.
Figure 3: Comparison of Total Publicly Planned funding for
Higher Education (£million) and Unit funding (£) (1989–2003)

1.32 The Government has committed substantial investment
to education. Between 1997 and 2006, the proportion of GDP
spent on education will rise from 4.5 per cent to 5.6 per cent.
Spending on higher education will rise from a total of around
£7.5 billion in 2002–03 to almost £10 billion in 2005–06 – a real
terms increase of over 6 per cent each year. The table below gives
an outline of how the money will be used.
Summary of the Spending Review Settlement for Higher Education
in England (£million)
|
|
02–03
|
03–04
|
04–05
|
05–06
|
per cent Increase in
cash terms
05–06 over 02–03
|
|
Research*
|
1,910
|
2,144
|
2,318
|
2,633
|
38
|
of which capital*
|
256
|
364
|
453
|
453
|
77
|
|
Knowledge transfer*
|
62
|
82
|
101
|
114
|
84
|
|
Teaching and learning
|
3,943
|
4,230
|
4,604
|
4,963
|
26
|
of which capital
|
155
|
207
|
377
|
442
|
185
|
|
Expansion
|
0
|
9
|
21
|
32
|
|
|
Access and widening particpation
|
86
|
119
|
130
|
132
|
53
|
|
Management, leadership, and strategic development
|
15
|
23
|
32
|
34
|
127
|
|
Student support**
|
1,578
|
1,691
|
1,839
|
1,996
|
26
|
|
Other
|
2
|
11
|
12
|
14
|
|
|
Total recurrent
|
7,185
|
7,738
|
8,227
|
9,023
|
|
|
Total capital
|
411
|
571
|
830
|
895
|
|
|
Grand Total
|
7,596
|
8,309
|
9,057
|
9,918
|
31
|
* Including estimates of the amount of the
Office of Science and Technology’s UK wide funding that is likely
to go to HE institutions in England. These estimates are forward
projections based on spending in previous years by OST and the
OST Research Councils.
** Estimated share of student support likely to go on HE student
domiciled in England. These estimates are based on the most recent
data from the Student Loans Company.
1.33 This allocation is the most generous for a decade.
It will stabilise the funding of universities, and allow them
to make sustained progress in improving research volumes and quality
and in tackling the huge backlogs in research and teaching infrastructure.
1.34 The Government will continue to stand by universities
in future spending review settlements. However, for our universities
to be able to develop their strengths and address the challenges
that the future will bring requires a more sustainable funding
regime with greater freedom for them to be able to access new
funding streams on their own account.
1.35 In the long term, we see a much greater role for
universities establishing endowment funds and using the income
from them, in much the same way as is done in the United States.
For example, Harvard has an endowment fund of $18 billion, while
Oxford University and its colleges have only £2 billion.
This, though, will require a significant change in attitude from
donors, including alumni. Each year approximately 10 per cent
of Princeton University’s overall budget is raised through Annual
Giving. In 1999–2000, Annual Giving produced a record $35.7 million
in unrestricted funds, with 60.8 per cent of all former undergraduate
alumni participating. Durham University’s Annual Giving Programme,
which has grown considerably in recent years, has only raised
a total of somewhere over £1.5 million since 1994. If we are to
give them real freedom, we must look at ways of helping our universities
change the culture of giving and lever in more funding of their
own.
1.36 We also believe it is right that individual universities
should be able to secure increased contributions from their graduates
to supplement the substantial support that they receive from the
taxpayer, subject to firm limits to protect access and fairness.
Different courses and universities bring different benefits to
graduates, and we think that it is right both that universities
should get differential benefits, and that graduates should make
differential contributions to reflect that.
Diversity and Mission
1.37 The sector has embraced lifelong learning, research,
knowledge transfer, social inclusion and regional economic development.
There is a broad consensus within higher education that all of
these elements are both welcome and necessary. However, it is
unreasonable to expect all higher education institutions to sustain
all of these activities simultaneously at global, and not just
national, levels of excellence. No higher education system in
the world is organised in this way. Rather, scarce resources are
applied in such a way as to produce a focus on comparative advantage:
individual institutions focus on what they do best, while the
sector as a whole achieves this much wider range of objectives.
1.38 There is already a great deal of diversity within
the sector. But it needs to be acknowledged and celebrated, with
institutions both openly identifying and playing to their strengths.
1.39 The Government accepts that it has been partly responsible
for the failure to have an honest recognition of universities’
different roles. For example, institutions have in large measure
been driven towards greater involvement in research by the incentives
in the funding mechanisms, and by the criteria for being awarded
the status of a university (which helps them recruit students).
Government will continue to be the principal funder of higher
education, but we need to move to a funding regime which enables
each institution to choose its mission and the funding streams
necessary to support it, and to make sure that our system recognises
and celebrates different missions properly.
1.40 We also see a strong link between the development
of stronger missions and growing collaboration in the sector.
One of the results of universities acting as if they all had the
same mission has been that institutions across the sector view
each other as competitors; more diversity will make collaboration
easier as institutions with complementary missions associate.
In research, this will help us preserve the best pockets
of isolated research while concentrating funding on the very best;
in teaching, it will help the spreading of good practice and the
development of seamless progression routes for students; and in
linking with business it will help make sure that groups of institutions
can be responsive to a wide range of business needs.
1.41 Both mission and collaboration are challenges that
will demand outstanding management and leadership in our higher
education institutions. We must support the sector in developing
the capacity not only to manage these changes, but also to be
in the driving seat of future reform.
The vision for higher education
1.42 We cannot shirk the challenge of these critical
issues. Higher education is too important. Our spending review
settlement for the next three years is generous, and allows us
to take the first steps towards our new vision for higher education.
But we must use it to do more than hold off decline. We must take
this opportunity to lay the foundations for the reforms which
will transform the future of the sector.
1.43 Realising our vision will take time. Having presented
a radical picture of a freer future, it is the duty of government
to make sure that the transition is managed carefully and sensibly
so that change is not destabilising. So in some areas government
will want to support the way in which institutions move towards
new freedoms, and develop new patterns of provision. Government
also has to retain a role because it is the only body that can
balance competing interests between the different stakeholders.
It will also have a responsibility to intervene when universities
fail to provide adequate opportunities or when access, quality
or standards are at risk.
1.44 We see a higher education sector which meets the
needs of the economy in terms of trained people, research, and
technology transfer. At the same time it needs to enable all suitably
qualified individuals to develop their potential both intellectually
and personally, and to provide the necessary storehouse of
expertise in science and technology, and the arts and humanities
which defines our civilisation and culture.
1.45 To do so, our vision is of a sector which:
• recognises and values universities as creators of knowledge
and understanding and as engines for applying that new knowledge
for the benefit of all;
• recognises their role in educating their students to live
life to the full, through the acquisition of skills and through
fostering imagination, creativity and contribution to society;
• acknowledges and celebrates the differences between institutions
as each defines and implements its own mission. We see all HEIs
excelling in teaching and reaching out to low participation groups,
coupled with strengths in one or more of: research; knowledge
transfer; linking to the local and regional economy; and providing
clear opportunities for students to progress;
• builds strong and purposeful collaborations, including with
one another and with further education, to support the best teaching,
research management and knowledge transfer;
• supports and celebrates institutions which can compete with
the best in the world in research;
• is expanding towards 50 per cent participation for young
people aged 18–30 years from all backgrounds and providing courses
which satisfy both students and employers;
• meets the developing needs of students for new modes of study
and delivery of courses as well as pastoral and learning
support;
• offers the opportunity of higher education to all those who
have the potential to benefit;
• employs sufficient staff of the right calibre to achieve
its missions, and which recruits, develops, retains and rewards
them adequately;
• has the freedom to be innovative and entrepreneurial, with
strong management and visionary leadership which will set and
achieve clear goals for improving quality across the whole
range of each institution’s activity to implement its plans; and
• has sufficient funding from a range of sources to sustain
the sector and the institutions within it, and with an equitable
partnership for investment in higher education shared between
the taxpayer, the student and others.
1.46 This document sets out our strategy to move towards
that vision. We are confident that greater explicit differentiation,
greater freedom and greater collaboration are the keys to delivering
the further improvement in quality we shall need to retain and
strengthen our position as one of the world’s leading higher education
systems.
1 "The impact of higher
education institutions on the UK economy"; Universities UK
(May 2002). ...return
2 This includes ‘sub-degree’ higher education
provision. For honours graduates, the figure is 64 per cent. ...return
3 Survey by UK Universities Companies Association
(UNICO) and Nottingham University Business School (2002); and “Higher Education
– business interaction survey”, a report by the Centre for urban
and regional development studies, Newcastle upon Tyne. ...return