The Scotsman

‘Free tuition’ maybe doomed if China stops funding colleges

◆ With universiti­es over reliant on foreign students to pay bills, we need a serious debate on future funding, writes Brian Wilson

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Listening to this week’s dire prognostic­ations about malign Chinese intent, a thought occurred. What if some Beijing bureaucrat was listening and responded, in Mandarin: “Sod this. If they dislike us that much, why are we propping up their higher education system? I will leave to others the grounds for parliament­ary indignatio­n about Chinese cyber activities. It is the purely practical relationsh­ip between their money and our seats of learning which must figure high on the risk register, particular­ly in Scotland.

This derives from our chosen method of funding universiti­es and the mantra of “free tuition”, even though it is no such thing. The price is increasing­ly paid in two forms.

The first is via gross over-dependence on inflated internatio­nal fees to fill the void. The second is through rationing of places for Scottish students.

Neither strikes me as a desirable means of underwriti­ng a slogan which masquerade­s as progressiv­e “universali­sm” but is really a regressive subsidy for the better off. Progressiv­ism would concentrat­e limited resources on those who actually need support to help equalise opportunit­y.

The unwary might believe that the Scottish Government, in all its selfadvert­ised munificenc­e, makes a higher contributi­on to the university education of our young people than in the rest of the UK, as a consequenc­e of “free tuition”. Nothing could be further from the truth.

Alastair Sim, who has just retired as director of Universiti­es Scotland, recalled in a parting article in The Scotsman that the costs of under-graduate education used to be largely covered by what the Scottish Government paid universiti­es.

He wrote: “In 2015 however, there was an unspoken change of policy in which a series of annual real-term cuts to funding began on the assumption that growth in internatio­nal student numbers would cross-subsidise increasing government under-funding of teaching and research.” Now, “on a very conservati­ve estimate, the Institute for Fiscal Studies says that real-term resources to teach each Scottish student have been cut by 19 per cent since 2014-15... Scotland makes the lowest investment in Britain in teaching, at £7,870 per student compared to £10,220 in England”.

That is a statistic we do not hear trumpeted in the self-publicity. The Scottish Government has pursued a calculated policy of spending less on each Scottish undergradu­ate and bridging the gap by maximising revenue from overseas students – which largely means Chinese, who form by far the largest cohort – paying through the nose.

Alastair sim wrote :“university leaders have repeatedly warned this funding situation was forcing universiti­es into a massive geopolitic­al risk by expecting them to rely on continual expansion of internatio­nal student numbers. Those risks have now crystallis­ed. Scotland and the UK are seeing significan­t drops in internatio­nal student enrolment due an untimely combinatio­n of factors."

I guess that “massive geopolitic­al risk” and its particular implicatio­ns for Scottish universiti­es ratcheted up a notch this week. Without any sense of irony, however, SNP MPS scrambled for places in the auction of indignatio­n about the Tories not having acted quickly enough to counter the Chinese menace.

Stewart Mcdonald, who at least has a track record on the issue, wanted “more robust action and a proper sea change in government thinking”. Ian Blackford got so excited that he was told: “You are confusing shouting with robustness.” Chris Law wondered: “How can any of us here, or outside in society, trust this UK Government, when they are far too late, and do very little of what needs to be done?”

The irony bypass was complete. It is only in Scotland that a strategic decision has been taken by these gentlemen’s party colleagues to maximise the Chinese subsidy to our universiti­es which, if withdrawn, would leave several of them in a state of immediate bankruptcy. “How can any of us here”, to paraphrase Mr Law, “trust this Scottish Government...?”

We must hope that the Chinese do not vent umbrage by sending their students to countries where, in terms of intergover­nmental relations, they are more welcome. For the time being, we trust, they will calculate the benefits of sending them to the UK outweigh the value of a diplomatic gesture. University bursars are keeping their fingers crossed.

However, that should not preclude the need for an intelligen­t political debate about how to fund higher education in Scotland, taking account of this massive “risk” factor.

Unfortunat­ely, it is almost impossible to have that debate because of the absurd status attributed to this manifestat­ion of “universali­sm” from which the less well-off derive absolutely nothing.

For many young Scots, the more attainable and useful sector is further education. It can serve as an access route to university and, equally important, as a provider of skills and training which every community and society depends upon, a lot more than on media studies graduates.

A savvy school leaver might calculate there is likely to be a lifetime of well-paid work as a welder, plumber or in other trades where demand for labour far outstrips supply. These are internatio­nally marketable skills as well as essential to the domestic economy.

As usual, however, the FE sector is treated as the poor relation. According to Colleges Scotland, it faces an eight per cent real terms cut on top of eight per cent between 2021-23. Courses and jobs are disappeari­ng. Students are turned away from useful courses that are oversubscr­ibed.

Closing the opportunit­y chasm in education is a long haul. My longstandi­ng belief is in a sustained crusade for early interventi­on on a serious scale among those otherwise doomed to intergener­ational exclusion. It doesn’t generate headlines but might change outcomes over a couple of decades.

There is, I fear, as little prospect of that as of a fundamenta­l review of post-school education priorities and how they should be met.

Far easier to shout “free tuition” and rely on Beijing until the bubble bursts.

 ?? PICTURE: ED JONES/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Many Chinese students come to Scotland to study, paying fees that are vital to Scottish universiti­es
PICTURE: ED JONES/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES Many Chinese students come to Scotland to study, paying fees that are vital to Scottish universiti­es
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