In January, a report on the financial sustainability of the UK’s Higher Education sector revealed that 40 percent of the country’s universities were forecasting a deficit for 2023–24. By March, the University and College Union (UCU) branch at Queen Mary University of London had launched a live webpage titled “UK HE shrinking.” As the sector dwindles, the page grows; at the time of writing, it identifies sixty-four universities in the UK that are rolling out redundancies, restructures, reorganizations, and department closures.
On July 4, the Labour Party was elected to government with a landslide majority and a promise to rebuild Britain’s public sector after fourteen damaging years of Conservative rule. Amid staffing and funding crises in primary education, prisons, and the National Health Service, higher education has fallen to the wayside, barely garnering attention on the campaign trail. The following lines, buried deep in the 2024 manifesto, amount to the new government’s total engagement with the university sector:
The current higher education funding settlement does not work for the taxpayer, universities, staff, or students. Labour will act to create a secure future for higher education and the opportunities it creates across the UK. We will work with universities to deliver for students and our economy.
Absent from this vague statement were any plans to save the sixty-four universities that are rolling out redundancy programs, closing departments, and in some cases facing bankruptcy. At best, the party’s vague promise to “deliver for students and our economy” says nothing. At worst, it reveals a continuation of the Conservative project of forcing UK universities to compete with one another over a finite pool of…
La suite est à lire sur: jacobin.com
Auteur: Mae Losasso

