The Mail on Sunday

First university chief to break £ 1/2m pay barrier ( no wonder he’s smiling)

- By Julie Henry

THE row over the huge salaries awarded to Britain’s university heads has been reignited after the first chief to be paid more than £500,000 a year was named.

François Ortalo-Magné was paid £501,000 last year to run the London Business School – a figure critics have branded ‘unjustifia­ble’.

The package, revealed in the school’s latest annual financial statement, is more than three times the Prime Minister’s salary and an inflation-busing increase of 11 per cent on what his predecesso­r was paid.

French-born Mr Ortalo-Magné has spent most of his academic career in the US, joining the London Business School in August last year from Wisconsin School of Business – an institutio­n ranked just 71st in the world in one MBA course ranking.

Matt Waddup of the University And College Union said such pay deals ‘suggest universiti­es have either learned nothing from the senior pay scandals that have been so damaging for the sector in recent years – or that they just don’t care.’

John O’Connell, chief executive of the Taxpayers Alliance, added: ‘This kind of largesse is not justifiabl­e.’

Mr Ortalo-Magné’s pay deal, which includes salary, benefits and pension, breaks t he previous r ecord of £444,000 awarded to Sir David Eastwood, vice-chancellor at Birmingham University.

Mr Ortalo-Magné is also provided with free ‘grace and favour’ accommodat­ion on the campus overlookin­g Regent’s Park. The market rent for such a property would be up to £125,000 a year.

London Business School, part of the University of London, is one the world’s top business schools, with tuition fees of up to £84,000. Like other UK universiti­es, its academics apply for and receive Government-funded research grants. The school received almost £8 million in grants last year, the financial statement reveals.

Details of the deal come as Exeter University accounts reveal that its vice-chancellor, Sir Steve Smith, is set to pocket bonuses totalling almost £400,000 between 2019 and 2021 on top of his £423,000-a-year pay packet.

The row about big financial rewards for vice-chancellor­s exploded earlier this year when Bath University’s Dame Glynis Breakwell stepped down after details of her £471,000 pay package emerged. Her successor earns £200,000 less.

Research suggests vice-chancellor­s now get an average of £253,000 a year while some live rent-free, have chauffeur-driven cars and enjoy firstclass travel.

Union campaigner Mr Waddup said: ‘It’s clear that the voluntary remunerati­on code vaunted by the Government is doing little to improve scrutiny or encourage restraint. A new era of transparen­cy at our universiti­es cannot come soon enough.’

The Office For Students, which regulates universiti­es, has ordered institutio­ns to publish details of vicechance­llors’ pay, including bonuses and benefits. Universiti­es argue they have to pay generous salaries to attract talented leaders but MPs have called for more action to curb excesses.

London Business School says Mr Ortalo-Magné’s salary is ‘broadly in line with peers and benchmarke­d in line with our competitor­s’.

And Exeter University said Sir Steve’s ‘conditiona­l, target-led and longterm incentive scheme’ was agreed in 2003, adding that if he claims the payouts ‘they will reflect his outstandin­g performanc­e against challengin­g targets over a long period of time’.

 ??  ?? FAT CAT? Mr Ortalo-Magné is receiving £501,000 to run London Business School
FAT CAT? Mr Ortalo-Magné is receiving £501,000 to run London Business School

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