糖心Vlog

Uncertain future for Hefce

Published on
March 17, 2016
Last updated
March 17, 2016

The annual grant letter from the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills to the 糖心Vlog Funding Council for England, which typically arrives in late December or January, has arrived unprecedentedly late this year in March (鈥BIS grant letter asks Hefce to deliver TEF鈥, 4聽March). You can see the difficulty. Here is Hefce slated in the Green Paper for abolition and replacement by an Office for Students at some date to depend on a higher education bill, possibly to be in the Queen鈥檚 Speech in May (or June? No, May again). Meanwhile, the law says that it鈥檚 still the Funding Council, the statutory body through which the allocation of public funding for higher education must pass. Glimpses of discussions with BIS may be spotted in Hefce鈥檚 board papers.

The Green Paper is vague on proposed new arrangements. 鈥淎llocating grant funding鈥 is mentioned briefly, with a sketch of a choice to be made between letting ministers set the policy and then handing much of the task of detailed funding allocation by formula to 鈥淏IS officials鈥, or allowing BIS to devise the necessary formulas before 鈥渉anding鈥 the task of disbursement to the Student Loans Company or 鈥渁nother funding body鈥 (unspecified). With 600 responses to be collated, it will be quite a while before BIS can publish its 鈥渇indings鈥 on respondents鈥 views on this point.

However, the grant letter hands Hefce the responsibility for 鈥渋mplementing the second year of the Teaching Excellence Framework鈥, a task for which it has been negotiating energetically since the TEF was announced. That seems to assume that it will still be there some time ahead. Yet Hefce gets a rap over the knuckles in the letter in connection with its 鈥淨uality Assessment鈥 plans, although it is putting work out to tender as though it had quite a long tomorrow.

Central to the funding allocation question is the eligibility of providers to access the public funding for higher education that Hefce currently disburses. The Financial Times ran an article on 10 March stating the prime minister鈥檚 intention that the bill will include the necessary legislative changes to make it easier for a private newcomer to call itself a university. Such new entrants would automatically become eligible for student loan funding. But the Green Paper鈥檚 suggestion that the SLC might disburse the remainder of the public 鈥渢eaching funding鈥 to which student fees are complementary must surely open the way to their being able to access some of that too. The Donald Trump University is just waiting to move in.

G.鈥塕. Evans
Oxford


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