Daily Mail

Yet another university pay row as chief gets £400k package

- By Tom Payne

A UNIVERSITY was criticised yesterday for awarding its new principal a pay packet of more than £400,000, along with a graceand-favour townhouse.

Campaigner­s said the deal given to Professor Peter Mathieson made a mockery of recent promises to curb pay largesse in higher education.

Edinburgh University’s offer means the salary for his position has now risen by a third.

Professor Mathieson will be paid a basic salary of £342,000 – £85,000 more than his predecesso­r. He will also receive around £42,000 in lieu of pension contributi­ons and £26,000 to cover relocation costs to a five-bedroom grace-andfavour home in the centre of the city.

The generous arrangemen­t comes after former universiti­es minister Jo Johnson called for an end to the ‘upwards ratchet’ of university executive pay. It was criticised as another ‘outrageous fat-cat sal- ary’ by former Labour education minister Lord Adonis.

Sally Hunt, of the University and College Union, said: ‘ Edinburgh must have looked at months of terrible headlines for higher education about pay and perks … and decided a massive salary hike, a welcome package over £400,000 and a five-bed central Edinburgh home is the best response.

‘It is quite incredible. There is a real crisis of leadership in our universiti­es at the moment . Universiti­es have promised time and again to get to grip with excessive senior pay and perks, yet this latest example shows they have no intention of doing so. ‘Politician­s can talk all they like about tougher sanctions to deal with the problem, but it looks like universiti­es will continue to ignore them.’ Professor Mathieson’s predecesso­r at Edinburgh was Professor Sir Timothy O’Shea, who stood down last year after 15 years.

According to university accounts, he received a basic salary of £257,000 in 2017. As well as the grace-and-favour home, Professor O’Shea had access to an executive car and driver.

Professor Mathieson, formerly vice chancellor of Hong Kong University, defended his pay. ‘I am aware there has been a lot of focus on vice chancellor­s’ pay, I’ve read that with interest from Hong Kong,’ he told The Times. ‘I had no negotiatio­ns – they made me an offer and I accepted it.

‘There was never any discussion about me wanting to be the highest paid … that offer involved me taking a substantia­l pay cut. In terms of percentage of turnover, I’m actually the lowest paid in Scotland.’ In earning more than £400,000, Professor Mathieson joins Dame Glynis Breakwell, who received £468,000 for the role of vice chancellor at Bath University. She announced her retirement following outcry over her pay.

According to the UCU, hundreds of staff at some universiti­es are on six-figure sums – 451 at Oxford, 451 at Cambridge and 444 at UCL.

In November, the Office for Students said vice chancellor­s paid many times the average staff salary would be named and shamed. Chairman Sir Michael Barber said the watchdog would ‘bear down’ on pay levels ‘out of kilter’ with a university’s performanc­e.

÷The chief executive of a leading academy chain was paid a package worth more than half a million pounds in 2016/17.

Accounts for the Harris Federation show Sir Daniel Moynihan earned £ 440,000-£ 445,000. But employer pension and national insurance contributi­ons bring his total package to between £550,000 and £565,000, according to figures reported in the Times Educationa­l Supplement.

Watchdog: We’ll shame universiti­es over pay From the Mail, November 25

 ??  ?? New job: Peter Mathieson
New job: Peter Mathieson

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