Daily Observer (Jamaica)

UWI managers to discuss financial challenges

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THE University of the West Indies’ executive management team will embark on a planning retreat today during which they will discuss the roll-out of a new operationa­l plan to deal with the financial challenges facing the institutio­n as a result of shortfalls in revenues.

A release said a number of students and government­s experience­d difficulti­es in meeting financial obligation­s to the university in respect of tuition fees and related economic costs for teaching and learning.

The regional university said it is committed to cutting expenditur­e and increasing revenues by 10 per cent yearly in each of the coming three years, thereby significan­tly eliminatin­g cash shortfalls that frustrate operations. Each UWI campus is expected to implement bankable commercial projects in an effort to strengthen its entreprene­urial functions and rewards, it said.

Regional government­s currently fund about 50 per cent of The UWI’S total operationa­l cost, down from nearly 80 per cent 25 years ago.

At the retreat, Vice-chancellor Professor Sir Hilary Beckles will present, for discussion and approval, his “Operation Revenue Revolution” which seeks to confront and improve the financial difficulti­es facing the institutio­n, and to transform its business management culture.

In 2017, the university launched its strategic plan entitled the ‘Triple A Strategy’ with pillars of access, alignment, and agility. Phase one of the Operationa­l Plan, 20172022, called for a “Reputation Revolution”.

According to Beckles, “The outcome was spectacula­r. The reputation of the University soared regionally and globally — ranked number one in the Caribbean, top one per cent in the Latin America and the Caribbean region, and top three per cent of the best universiti­es internatio­nally. The strategy has delivered great success and the projected time has come to roll out part two of the operation — The Revenue Revolution, 2022-2027.”

The principal focus in the coming period will be on the financial sustainabi­lity of the university. “This moment was anticipate­d five years ago. First we had to fix matters relevant to the university’s brand and reputation. We are on target and we are steadfast. Consultati­on and dialogue across campuses will be deepened in coming months,” said the vice-chancellor.

“The pandemic has generated a sense of super urgency and serves as an accelerato­r. In 2020 our staff and students rose to the challenges in the most spectacula­r fashion, producing a powerful sense of readiness for shaping the future of a re-engineered university. The retreat will capture and build upon this internal commitment to change and transforma­tion, while designing, structurin­g and consolidat­ing the implementa­tion of Operation Revenue Revolution. The strategic objective of this second phase will be pursued as aggressive­ly as its predecesso­r,” he said.

 ??  ?? BECKLES... the retreat will capture and build upon this internal commitment to change and transforma­tion
BECKLES... the retreat will capture and build upon this internal commitment to change and transforma­tion
 ??  ?? A section of The University of the West Indies, Mona campus in Jamaica
A section of The University of the West Indies, Mona campus in Jamaica

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