Mail & Guardian

Varsities plagued by ‘cost disease’

Cost efficiency at universiti­es is under scrutiny as employee salaries make up their biggest expense

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equivocati­on that a whole host of universiti­es are at critical points.”

Jaco van Schoor, deputy vice-chancellor for finance at the University of Johannesbu­rg (UJ), said, if there had ever been any slack on university balance sheets, it was all but gone by now. “The last two or three years have forced us to have a look at cost efficiency,” he said. “At university level we all cut our budgets.”

There is no credible research into the cost efficiency of universiti­es in South Africa. Nico Cloete, the director of the Centre for Higher Education Trust, recently implored economists to conduct research into efficienci­es at the universiti­es.

It is well known, however, that inflation at universiti­es is typically higher than the national rate. In 2014, tertiary education fees grew by 10% whereas the national average inflation rate that year was 6.13%.

Universiti­es point to a number of expenses, such as equipment and software, being denominate­d in foreign currencies and therefore rising as the rand weakens.

But a higher internal inflation rate is a common phenomenon found in universiti­es worldwide. This is attributed to the rising cost of every university’s biggest expense — its staff. This was first labelled the “cost disease” in the 1960s and describes a phenomenon that sees salaries rise without a correspond­ing increase in labour productivi­ty.

According to a 2008 report on tuition fees by Higher Education South Africa, now known as Universiti­es South Africa: “In order to attract good staff, academics’ remunerati­on must keep pace with the remunerati­on of comparable occupation­s in the economy, which are largely determined by productivi­ty changes in those sectors. But teaching and research are “labour-intensive” and not easily “mechanised” to increase productivi­ty.

“As a result of the higher than inflation rise in the prices of higher education inputs … for universiti­es to be able to continue to generate sufficient revenue (in real terms) from tuition fees, and be able to prosecute their mandates effectivel­y, they have to raise tuition fees over and above the national inflation rate,” the report said.

Roy Marcus, the UJ council chairperso­n, said: “How effectivel­y rands are used will vary from university to university, but the drive around this matter is ruthless.”

He noted the critical thing universiti­es should be monitoring is the staff cost issue: “It is the biggest cost — no doubt.”

Staff costs account for anywhere between 50% and 75% of total expenses.

“We do have a small academic staff pool, and that means that costs do increase as there are supply and demand issues,” said Van Schoor.

Improved productivi­ty requires investing more in academic staff than in administra­tors. But administra­tive staff at tertiary education institutio­ns far outnumber academics, according to the higher education and training department’s statistics for 2014. Of almost 50 000 p e r ma n e n t e mp l o y e e s , 18 200 (36.5%) were academic staff and 27 100 (54.4%) were administra­tive staff. The balance were service staff.

Meanwhile, the number of students per academic has steadily grown.

The only universiti­es where academics outnumber administra­tors are at the universiti­es of Venda, Limpopo and Sol Plaatje in the Northern Cape, which all have relatively small staff complement­s.

Bawa said the high number of admin staff were needed for accountabi­lity purposes. “Councils really require universiti­es to be more rigorous in their reporting. And there are also big changes on how the auditor general audits the use of public money. All of this requires extra people.”

The expanding ranks of administra­tive staff are a concern for universiti­es globally. In his 2011 book The Fall of the Faculty: The Rise of the All-Administra­tive University and Why It Matters, Benjamin Ginsberg warned that the growth in administra­tive staff had pushed up costs.

In 2014, the online news aggregator Huffington Post reported on a boom in higher education administra­tors in the United States. It quoted Richard Vedder of the Centre for College Affordabil­ity and Productivi­ty: “They’ll say: ‘ We’re making moves to cut costs,’ and mention something about energyeffi­cient light bulbs, and ignore the new assistant to the assistant to the associate vice-provost they just hired.”

One way the state and universiti­es measure efficiency is by graduation rates. But only 30% of students graduate within three years and 56% in five years, according to a recent presentati­on by Cloete and researcher­s Charles Sheppard and François van Schalkwyk.

The real costs for students to be successful in South African universiti­es are enormous, Van Schoor said. “[At UJ] we have a free inter-campus bus service and provide food to 3 800 students twice a day, and we don’t charge for it. It comes out of fees and subsidies.”

He estimated the socioecono­mic costs local universiti­es incur account for 10% to 20% of all expenses.

Said Van Schoor: “What does cost efficient mean? Can we apply that to the future of our country? It’s not like you are shopping at Pick n Pay and getting the cheapest tin of baked beans. To get a student from 18 to 23 is not a one-size-fits-all exercise.”

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