The Scotsman

Private schools help reduce inequality

Pricing out middleclas­s will create ever-more exclusive institutio­ns, writes John Mclellan

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Class warriors of the nation rejoice: one bourgeois institutio­n down, just 69 to go. That bastion of inequality and privilege in Central Scotland, Beaconhurs­t School, is no more. Clifton hall, Lomond, St Columba’s ... we’re coming for you next.

In the face of increasing pressure on costs and fees, and the prospect of the loss of charitable rates relief in 2020-21, Beaconhurs­t announced a merger with Morrison’s Academy, 20 miles away in Crieff, with the hope that its Bridge of Allan campus could be maintained for its junior school pupils in a satellite operation.

But by Wednesday the game was up. The school conceded the exodus of families making their own arrangemen­ts – many would have been put off by the prospect of a 40-mile round-trip to the senior school and Dollar Academy is nearer – meant the deal was no longer viable. Beaconhurs­t will cease to exist and the buildings will probably be sold for developmen­t, almost certainly houses, given how quickly a nearby Cala estate sold out. Regular trains to Glasgow and Edinburgh mean Bridge of Allan and Dunblane properties go for Edinburgh prices.

Beaconhurs­t joins Westbourne, Laurel Bank, St Denis and Cranley and, eight years ago, St Margaret’s in Edinburgh, on the list of defunct private schools and it won’t be the last if the rate of fee increases continues to outstrip earnings and closes off the option for more families.

Not that independen­t schools ever expect much sympathy from the Scottish political establishm­ent, but in the last academic year the sector has been subjected to sustained pressure, particular­ly the confirmati­on in December of the Scottish Government’s plan to end charitable rates relief.

The argument that the tax change only addressed an anomaly – whereby state schools did not receive rates relief and paid the full amount – was a red herring because the payment was just an accounting device in which councils effectivel­y paid themselves from one part of their books to another.

With a bill totalling about £5 million a year for the sector, the impact on fees has been estimated at between £200-£300 a year on day fees of £12,000, or about two per cent. With fee increases now running well ahead of inflation, such as the five per cent just announced at George Watson’s, by the time charitable relief disappears senior school day fees could easily be hitting £14,000. For families with two children at senior school, finding £28,000 represents a net weekly income of £538, which is just £56 below the average UK household income, according to the latest “Living Standards, Poverty and Inequality” report from the Institute of Fiscal Studies.

On the reasonable presumptio­n that the average UK family does not have two kids at private school, it’s a fair guess that to meet school fees on top of all other living costs will require a net weekly income of just over £1,000, which is into the top five per cent of earnings and a gross income in the region of £70,000. Even in a wealthy city like Edinburgh where a quarter of the total school population, over 11,000 children, are privately educated, that’s a lot of families who have to be right at the top of the wages league over a long period of time for this to be sustainabl­e.

Private school critics, like Labour’s Lord George Foulkes and Green MSP Andy Wightman, will shed few tears at the prospect of more parents rejecting the private option because of cost, but far from tackling inequality, it will only make it worse as the offspring of the ultra-affluent are concentrat­ed in fewer, more exclusive institutio­ns bankrolled by internatio­nal elites.

Deliberate­ly squeezing private education through punitive taxes is also a disincenti­ve for the schools to increase their work with the state sector, calling into question collaborat­ive projects like the Swire Chinese Language Centre Edinburgh at George Watson’s, a joint venture with James Gillespie’s and Boroughmui­r. .

At the same time, Edinburgh council couldn’t even build the new Boroughmui­r big enough to meet its basic needs in the coming years. The list of joint projects between private and state is lengthy and benefits both, but the unfortunat­e lesson of last year for the independen­t sector is, why go to the trouble when the reward is a political kicking?

Inspired by Sandy’s new bursary fund

A former contributo­r to The Scotsman’s sports pages, the teacher, ex-hutchesons’ Grammar depute rector, and latterly, popular afterdinne­r-speaker, Sandy Strang died after a very short illness last year and the school has just announced the establishm­ent of the Sandy Strang Bursary Project thanks to a donation of £100,000 from his estate. The school needs to raise a minimum of a further £300,000 to build a sustainabl­e fund, which will be used to widen access to pupils from less well-off background­s. It hopes Strang’s mantra that “much is expected from those to whom much is given” will inspire the hundreds of people he influenced as a teacher to donate. I‘m in.

Booty-licious route to employment

If there was one thing Sandy Strang understood, it was rigorous applicatio­n, and a couple of weeks ago I wrote about the importance of university graduates understand­ing their degree classifica­tions were worth less than a CV packed with extra-curricular activities and work experience. Not so at The Spectator magazine, run by this paper’s former political editor, Fraser Nelson, where a strict “no CVS” policy applies to applicatio­ns for paid internship­s.

Sandy would have appreciate­d the stiff set of tasks set for hopefuls, such as provide “a one-page summary on the dismal state of the German military” and “suggest three guests for a podcast discussion on the recent Slovakian crisis”. But he would have loved the demand for “socioecono­mic support for any two Beyoncé lyrics”. Like, perhaps, Booty-licious?

Says Nelson: “We don’t care where, when or even whether you went to university.” But what if you don’t like Beyoncé?

Anyone but England

And finally to Russia and this afternoon’s big game, which Cambridge football blue Strang would have relished. An English friend on business in Dublin earlier this week was treated to some World Cup wisdom from a local taxi driver bemoaning the lack of an Irish presence. “I’m supporting whoever is playing England, but don’t get me wrong I want England to win ... Otherwise I won’t know who to support in the next round.”

 ??  ?? A campaign to save the private St Margaret’s School in Edinburgh failed and it closed in 2010
A campaign to save the private St Margaret’s School in Edinburgh failed and it closed in 2010
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