South Wales Echo

Wales’ universiti­es in a £60m funding shortfall

- ABBIE WIGHTWICK Education Editor abbie.wightwick@walesonlin­e.co.uk

UNIVERSITI­ES in Wales will get nearly £60m less in public funding for the 2022-23 academic year at the same time as record numbers of students have applied to study here.

The Higher Education Funding Council for Wales (Hefcw), the body which funds and regulates higher education in Wales, will allocate £217.1m of public funding to universiti­es and other higher education providers next academic year compared to £275.3m in 2021-22.

The money comes to Hefcw from the Welsh Government.

Hefcw’s allocation is not the only source of funding to universiti­es.

They also receive £9,000 for each full-time undergradu­ate student from the UK and the EU in tuition fees as well as income from internatio­nal students, grants, and commercial activities.

Universiti­es in England receive £9,250 for each full-time graduate which has prompted calls in the past to raise student fees in Wales.

The news comes as record numbers of people have applied for university places in Wales starting in September.

Date from admissions service Ucas shows more than 82,000 applicatio­ns have been made for the 2022-23 academic year including 23,500 from Wales – a 3.7% rise on last year.

More than 38.1% of 18-yearolds in Wales have applied to go to university here or elsewhere next academic year and more than 12,000 internatio­nal students, who pay higher fees than home students, have applied to come to Wales to study.

Before the pandemic hit applica- tions to Welsh universiti­es were down but applicatio­ns were predicted to rise this year owing to a number of factors including changes to the time tuition fees are paid back.

A Hefcw spokesman said this year’s funding should not be viewed as a drop but rather a return to normal after extra pandemic and some other extra funding during 2020-21 and 2021-22.

In 2020-21 Hefcw originally had around £172m to distribute but oneoff Covid and extra funding took that up to £311m in the pandemic year. In 2021-22 the original £206.5m allocation swelled to £275.5m including extra money for Covid costs, research, and net zero work.

The Hefcw spokesman said: “Additional in-year funding from the Welsh Government in 2021-22 meant that we were able to allocate £68.8m more than we had originally announced in 2021 as one-off rather than recurrent funding. “This funding was provided to continue to support HE providers and students through the Covid-19 pandemic.

“Should any in-year funding adjustment­s be made by the Welsh Government to our budget and remit letter for 2022-23, as we have seen over the pandemic years, this would result in a revision to the funding distribute­d to providers in 2022-23.”

Figures released by the Welsh Government on July 22 this year, which cover the period from September 2020 to August 2021, show income and spending rose.

In the 2020-21 academic year total income to the Welsh higher education sector rose 9% to £1.78bn compared to 2019-20.

At the same time HE spending in 2020-21 soared to £1.71bn – 12% and £185m higher than in 2019-20. Income through tuition fees and education contracts, which accounted for 54% of income, rose to £970m.

Grants from funding bodies also rose by 51% from £220m in 2019-20 to £332m in 2020-21. Research grants in 2020-21 made up 13% of the income of Welsh universiti­es - the same percentage as 2019-20.

At the same time there was an increase in the amount that Welsh universiti­es have spent on staff – £970m in 2020-21 compared to £831m in 2019-20 – making up 57% of all spending.

Additional funding from the Welsh Government meant we were able to allocate £68.8m more than originally announced

Hefcw spokesman

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 ?? CHRIS ISON ?? Record numbers of students have applied to universiti­es in Wales
CHRIS ISON Record numbers of students have applied to universiti­es in Wales

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