糖心Vlog

Inside a cooperative university

We report from Spain on the University of Mondragon, which is fighting to preserve its teaching mission, industry-focused research and mutual governance model

Published on
August 29, 2013
Last updated
June 10, 2015

Source: Getty

Mondragon is jointly owned by its academic and administrative staff. No聽one may earn more than three times the salary of the lowest-paid worker

It is hard to think of a time when academics in the UK have been more dissatisfied with where the academy is going. Their list of gripes is long: from the rise of the student 鈥渃onsumer鈥 to overpaid vice-chancellors, a聽distant management class, increasing marketisation, a聽seemingly ever-growing brood of administrators and, perhaps least tangibly, a sense that academia is turning into a competitive rather than comradely affair.

Last year, senior scholars founded the Council for the Defence of British Universities, which set out to fight many of these developments, along with what they believe to be increasing control of universities by government and business. But so far no practical alternatives have emerged. Meanwhile, experiments such as Lincoln鈥檚 Social Science Centre, a cooperative organisation offering higher education for free, have taken place only on a聽very small, relatively informal scale.

At a time when many academics feel remote from their university鈥檚 managers and strategic plans, the cooperative model, in which all staff have a stake, has obvious appeal. So, can the University of Mondragon, an established higher education cooperative in the lush green mountains of the Basque Country in northern Spain, offer any answers for academies elsewhere? Founded in 1997 from a collection of co-ops dating back to 1943, the institution now has 9,000 students. The staff have joint ownership and the institution鈥檚 culture and its model of governance are radically different from those of modern UK universities.

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糖心Vlog went to see how and why they do things differently at Mondragon, and to consider whether some of its practices might appeal to UK scholars looking for a new model for the academy.

Even before arriving in Spain, there is one obvious difference about Mondragon 鈥 it does not have a press office to restrict access to the top brass or vet comments by its employees. Instead, THE鈥檚 trip was arranged directly through teaching and administrative staff. And on arrival, transport was provided by the vice-chancellor, Jon聽Altuna, who drove from campus to campus 鈥 with the occasional stop-off for tapas and wine.

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Mondragon is jointly owned by its academic and administrative staff. To become a聽fully fledged member, employees have to work there for at least two years, and then pay 鈧12,000 (拢10,300), which buys a聽slice of the university鈥檚 capital that can be withdrawn upon retirement.

However, it is unlikely that anyone employed by the university expects to earn enough to build a personal art collection or聽buy membership to an exclusive private members鈥 club: no one at Mondragon may earn more than three times the salary of the lowest-paid worker.

This is a far cry from the UK, where in 2008 the ratio between the highest- and the lowest-paid workers in higher education was, on average, 15.35:1, according to the 鈥 a bigger gap than found in any other part of the public sector.

There is one exception at Mondragon, though: the rector, the closest thing the university has to a chief executive, is permitted to take home five times the lowest wage 鈥 although even this relative largesse was agreed only after 鈥渉uge argument鈥, Altuna notes.

Excluding cleaners and catering staff, who are subcontracted, the lowest-paid staff, such as administrative and maintenance workers, earn 鈧,421 a year. The highest-paid managers earn just over three times this amount, while the current rector earns about 鈧157,000. 鈥淲e are not in聽this project for [personal] profit-making,鈥 Altuna says with a smile.

Although the university鈥檚 student population is relatively small, at about 4,000 (it offers 21 undergraduate, 12 master鈥檚 and three PhD programmes), another 5,000 people a year undertake professional training at Mondragon. 鈥淲e want to be one of the main agents in making companies competitive,鈥 Altuna says.

He is referring to the fact that the university is in effect the training and research-and-development arm of a wider network of interlocking cooperatives, known collectively as the Mondragon Corporation.

Discard any quaint images you might have of basket-weaving communes eking out a trade in the Basque hills. The corporation employs more than 80,000 people and had a聽revenue of 鈧14 billion in 2012. It is the largest cooperative in the world and has 94 production plants outside Spain. Its factories manufacture white goods, industrial components and road bikes, while its construction wing built Bilbao鈥檚 swooping silver Guggenheim Museum.

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The university has a highly democratic governance structure. Its supreme body is the general assembly, a 30-strong committee of representatives composed of one-third staff, one-third students and one-third outside interested parties, often other co-ops in Mondragon Corporation. It meets annually to decide on the priorities for the coming year and has significant powers: it can, for example, sack members of the senior management team. (It聽last used this power in 2007 when one manager was dismissed, according to Altuna.)

It is impossible to recreate our model outside Mondragon, but it is possible to spread some of the culture and ideas of our version of higher education

Meanwhile, administrators make up just one in four workers, compared with 52聽per cent in the UK higher education sector, according to 2011-12 figures from the 糖心Vlog Statistics Agency.

Mondragon is also highly decentralised. 鈥淲e say that the chancellor [also known as the rector] has less power than the deans,鈥 says the current holder of the top post, Iosu Zabala Iturralde. (Zabala appears to be the only member of staff who wears a tie 鈥 but he does not go as far as wearing a suit jacket.)

The university has four faculties: business studies; engineering; humanities and education; and, since 2011, 鈥済astronomic鈥 science, the theory and practice of cookery. The first three began life as separate colleges, and merged into a university in 1997. Each faculty is its own cooperative, which makes Mondragon a kind of 鈥渃ooperative of co-ops鈥, and each department has substantial autonomy. They do not even share the same academic calendars.

Each faculty also has 鈥渢otal freedom to leave the project鈥, Altuna says. There was a聽lot of debate in the early days of the university about the wisdom of the faculties joining forces, he explains, but only by combining several subjects could Mondragon become a聽university and award its own degrees. Now they have lost their distinct identities, making it very difficult for them to break away, he thinks.

What also makes the university unusual is that its three founding faculties are spread across five towns in the Alto Deba region, the heart of the Basque Country. Most are 鈥渞emote鈥 locations, Altuna admits, estimating that none has a population of more than 10,000. Only in recent years has Mondragon set up bases in the cities of San Sebastian and Bilbao.

Mondragon places a strong emphasis on transparent governance. For example, any worker in the Faculty of Engineering can check on the expenses of any of their colleagues 鈥 with enough detail provided to make it possible to work out which restaurants they have been to and when, Altuna explains.

Its students and staff say the institution has a very different ethos from those of traditional universities. As Raquel Pangua, a fourth-year undergraduate training to be a聽teacher, puts it: 鈥淲e are like a family. We all work together 鈥 the university gives a lot of importance to group work. In public universities, they mostly work in an individual way, and maybe tutors don鈥檛 have that close a relationship with their students. We have a really close relationship with teachers.鈥

So Mondragon has equality, autonomy, openness, transparency and no ties. Are there any catches? Plenty, as it turns out.

Mondragon is a private university, and thus it receives minimal public funds. Just over a聽10th of its income comes from the Basque government鈥檚 structural funding, although the institution鈥檚 suite of new buildings 鈥 including the architecturally bold 鈧17聽million Basque Culinary Center in San Sebastian, designed to look like a stack of crooked plates from the outside 鈥 are largely funded by the Basque and Spanish administrations.

There is little room for the humanities: degrees are almost exclusively vocational. Mondragon offers bachelor鈥檚 degrees in mechanical, computer, biomedical and energy engineering, business administration and management, primary education and gastronomy and culinary arts. The master鈥檚 courses are largely in similar areas, although there is an MA in social economy and cooperativism.

Almost a third of Mondragon鈥檚 income comes from technology and knowledge transfer fees. It develops new products for the corporation鈥檚 engineering firms, consults for local businesses and advises schools in the region.

As a point of comparison, UK universities earned just 7.3聽per cent of their income from research contracts with UK-based industry, charities and public bodies in 2011-12, according to Hesa.

Mondragon鈥檚 heavy dependence on technology transfer income means that 鈥渢here is no聽ground for research that has no return鈥, Altuna says.

Still, there is no sense that academics at Mondragon begrudge the lack of opportunities to conduct blue-sky research; if聽anything, they seem proud that their work is being put to good use. But Altuna freely admits that some researchers 鈥渃annot understand it鈥. 鈥淭hey have quit and gone to a聽public university,鈥 he聽says.

Because employees鈥 salaries are dependent on their faculties not running at a loss, academics have to bear money in mind far more than they might like.

鈥淎t public universities, the lecturers 鈥 and sometimes the directors of the departments 鈥 don鈥檛 talk a lot about money,鈥 says Vicente Atxa Uribe, director of the Faculty of Engineering. 鈥淭hey talk more about academic things.鈥

They think 鈥渢he world will provide鈥 their salaries, claims Zabala, but that is not the way at Mondragon. Lecturers must constantly drive student recruitment, and rack their brains for new, income-generating technology transfer projects, he says.

Mondragon鈥檚 heavy reliance on contract research also leaves it exposed to the chill winds of Spain鈥檚 bleak economy, and ironically, the business faculty has been squeezed more than most.

Juanjo Martin, who is responsible for Mondragon鈥檚 international relations, admits that the business faculty is 鈥渘ot doing really well鈥 financially. Businesses have cut back on commissioning his faculty鈥檚 consultancy work while continuing to buy research from the engineering department because their projects are 鈥渕ore tangible than ours鈥, Martin suggests.

The faculty will make a loss this year, and workers have had their salaries cut 鈥 to 80聽per cent of their normal pay 鈥 partly because, says Martin, 鈥渋t鈥檚 impossible to fire people鈥 from the co-op. 鈥淭his year we are really suffering from the [economic] crisis in the Basque Country.鈥

Under the university鈥檚 regulations, a faculty can have up to 30聽per cent of its losses offset if other faculties are making a profit. Although wages are now as low as they are allowed to go in the business faculty, Martin is still positive.

鈥淥f course we are unhappy [with the pay cut] but it鈥檚 not as if we were in a public company. The project is ours. You are relaxed because you won鈥檛 lose your job,鈥 he explains.

Although parts of the university may be struggling financially, other Mondragon Corporation cooperatives are in worse positions. The trouble is, when your comrades get into difficulties, it is only brotherly to bail them out. All co-ops recently elected to give 1聽per cent of their income to support the beleaguered Fagor Electrodom茅sticos, a white goods manufacturer affected by the slump in Spanish demand. About 1,000 of its workers will be shifted to other, more successful co-ops, Altuna says.

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Still, Altuna is keen to stress that the university is not totally economically bound to the wider corporation: 40聽per cent of its technology transfer income is generated from deals with companies that are not cooperatives.

鈥淪ome people imagine we鈥檙e like the Mormons but in fact we鈥檙e open to the whole society,鈥 Martin adds. He points out that two-thirds of students in the business school go on to work outside the cooperative movement.

Another disadvantage of being a private institution is that Mondragon鈥檚 students must pay fees up front, and staff admit that most have to scrape the money together with the help of their families.

At just under 鈧5,500 a year for a bachelor鈥檚 course, fees are relatively low for a private university in Spain, and make up just over a聽third of Mondragon鈥檚 income. But Spanish public university fees, although they are increasing, are presently much lower, at about 鈧1,000 a year. Mondragon does, however, offer grants to students from poorer families, and students can work part-time during their studies at Alecop 鈥 a co-op that manufactures educational training and simulation equipment 鈥撀爐o help fund their studies.

Mondragon does feel subtly different from many UK institutions 鈥 staff are open about its problems, there is no relentlessly upbeat corporate message, and relations between workers feel less hierarchical and more relaxed than on many UK campuses. But some veteran staff express concern that the university鈥檚 cooperative spirit is waning.

Statue of Jos茅 Mar铆a Arizmendiarrieta

鈥淚 think some of the values have been lost along the way,鈥 Martin observes. 鈥淕oing to any meeting here, and any meeting in a public limited company, there is no difference. This is happening in all the co-ops in Mondragon.鈥

The cooperative spirit has become perfunctory, he believes. 鈥淚t鈥檚 like going to church, where you can go just on Sundays and listen to the priest and you are a Christian,鈥 he says.

Fred Freundlich, a US academic who has been working at Mondragon since the 1980s and lectures in business studies, says he has observed a decline in camaraderie. Fewer workers now eat their lunch together or go out for a glass of wine after work, he says.

One of the benefits of Mondragon鈥檚 ethos, he observes, is its highly collaborative research style. He contrasts this with the US where, he says, 鈥渢he culture is that faculty members may end up collaborating but each one is there to do their individual research鈥. But these days, even at Mondragon, researchers can be more reluctant to invite others to join their projects, focusing instead on trying to clock up as many of the hours they are required to work as possible, he says.

Freundlich thinks this is symptomatic of wider social change. In a bid to revive some of the older values, he is bringing in co-op 鈥渧eterans鈥 to explain to younger staff how they used to work together.

Other social pressures are chipping away at the sustainability of the project. The Basque Country, like much of southern Europe, has a聽rapidly ageing population. 鈥淣ot only in the Basque Country, but Spain generally, there are too many universities, and there鈥檚 not enough domestic demand to keep them running,鈥 Freundlich observes.

Mondragon is looking to expand its activities overseas, principally into South and Central America, both to spread its ideas and to create new markets for the companies in the corporation. 鈥淭he only way that our project can survive is to create activities in countries that are developing,鈥 Altuna says.

The university is helping a network of about 40,000 non-profit businesses in Colombia turn a private university into a higher education institution that will serve them with training and research. Mondragon is providing governance experts, lecturers and researchers. It has also acquired 80聽per cent of a private university in Mexico.

The plan is to eventually turn these two institutions into co-ops, but for the moment, the idea is too radical to implement in those countries, Altuna says. Indeed, many subsidiaries of cooperative businesses outside Spain are not co-ops, he says. The idea is an聽alien one in China, for example.

But in South Korea, people are going 鈥渃razy鈥 for cooperatives, Martin says, and the university receives regular delegations from countries where there is curiosity about the project.

鈥淚t is impossible to recreate our model outside Mondragon,鈥 Altuna says. 鈥淏ut it is possible to spread some of the culture and ideas of our version of higher education.鈥

Whether a cooperative university could flourish away from the special circumstances found in the close-knit Basque Country is unclear. But it may offer hope to those unhappy with the academy鈥檚 present direction in the UK and elsewhere.

In 2011, three academics 鈥 Rebecca Boden of the University of Roehampton, Davydd Greenwood of Cornell University and Susan Wright of Aarhus University 鈥 visited the university and wrote that Mondragon was a聽鈥渉ighly successful鈥 alternative to what they called 鈥渘eoliberalised university formations鈥.

鈥淚t is possible to create and manage successful universities that do not involve the exploitation of faculty as passive employees and the treatment of students as mere clients in a fee-for-service educational scheme,鈥 they conclude in 鈥淩eport on a field visit to Mondrag贸n University: a cooperative experience/experiment鈥, published in the journal Learning and聽Teaching.

Mondragon rejects the idea of private profit-making, and yet academics are perpetually concerned with bringing in income. Earnings are relatively equal, but fluctuate with financial performance. Governance is highly democratic, but allows for an unprecedented degree of influence from businesses and students. It may be an alternative to the state-funded public university 鈥 but is it worth it?

Could it happen here? Prospects for a cooperative university in the UK

A number of vice-chancellors have had private talks about adopting some elements of the cooperative model at their institutions, according to Mervyn Wilson, chief executive and principal of the Manchester-based Co-operative College, which specialises in studying and researching the movement.

The problem with universities in their current form is that they 鈥渢reat professionals as employees鈥, he argues. This means that running difficulties and big decisions are seen as 鈥渕anagement鈥檚 problem鈥, not 鈥渙ur problem鈥.

Give staff a slice of ownership and control and they are more likely to take responsibility, Wilson believes.

He says he has met a聽鈥渉andful鈥 of university leaders who are concerned about ways they can 鈥渄ifferentiate鈥 their institutions in the UK and globally.

鈥淭he ones I鈥檝e spoken to see a very distinctive community-focused role,鈥 Wilson says. They are not willing to go down the 鈥渟harp-elbowed鈥 corporate route favoured by others, he adds.

The introduction of higher undergraduate fees in England and more open competition for students means that the 鈥済round is opening up鈥ver the next three to five years lots of institutions will be looking at appropriate governance reforms in the marketised sector鈥, he believes.

There are already a聽number of cooperative higher education projects under way in the UK, in Brighton, Edinburgh, Glasgow and Cardiff. In Lincoln, the not-for-profit, cooperative, zero-fee Social Science Centre took its first cohort of nine students last October. But for now, these projects are extremely small and do not have degree-awarding powers.

Dan Cook, school manager and director of education in the Graduate School of Education at the University of Bristol, is currently in the early stages of a master鈥檚 thesis on cooperative universities. He thinks there is at least the possibility of something much bigger emerging.

If a larger cooperative institution were established, although it would face significant hurdles, 鈥渢hese are essentially the same ones any other private university鈥as successfully faced鈥, Cook聽says.

The government is encouraging new entrants to the sector and in the past year, it has approved the creation of three new private universities, Regent鈥檚 University and the for-profit University of Law and BPP University.

But 鈥渢he more likely possibility is for an existing university to convert to mutual status鈥, Cook believes. There would be various ways in which a聽university could legally convert, he says, but of the challenges that such a change would present, 鈥渘one is insurmountable鈥.

In 2011, the Cabinet Office announced 拢10聽million in funding to help public sector organisations spin off into mutuals, which it defines as 鈥渙rganisations in which employee control plays a聽significant role in their operation鈥, and this could include cooperatives.

鈥淭he bigger question than the legal one is that of culture 鈥 are universities ready to mutualise?鈥 asks Cook. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 a much bigger 鈥榠f鈥, but it is a聽question I鈥檓 hoping to make some progress on鈥.

However, many of the principles on which cooperatives are based are not necessarily that radical in higher education. Cook points out that the University of Cambridge 鈥渋s already configured as a sort of workers鈥 co-op鈥 because every academic is part of the governing body, Regent House.

But, he adds: 鈥淚聽don鈥檛 think anyone has told them yet.鈥

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Reader's comments (2)

Subcontract all the lowest paid, then restrict salaries to 3x that of the lowest paid employee:-) Maybe they will (altruistically) go on strike to raise the wages of the lowest paid employees....or subcontract them!
"the lowest-paid staff, such as administrative and maintenance workers, earn 鈧,421 a year. The highest-paid managers earn just over three times this amount, while the current rector earns about 鈧157,000" How come ,421x3 = 157,000 ??? Please get the facts correct before arguing!

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