The Dutch government has promised an聽extra 鈧700聽million (拢600聽million) for universities in the country, although experts note that the funding comes with strings attached.
Pieter Duisenberg, president of the Association of Universities of the Netherlands, said the new money 鈥 outlined in a letter from the education minister, Robbert Dijkgraaf 鈥 would help to聽ease 鈥渆xcessive workloads鈥 and would allow 鈥渟pace to聽do more research鈥.
Early career academics in permanent positions stand to do well, with the annual budget set aside for individual grants increasing from 鈧100聽million to 鈧300聽million.
Rens Buchwaldt, a member of the board at Wageningen University & Research, said his relatively small institution would gain an extra 鈧25聽million annually, allowing an extra 28 first-year academics to get the 鈧300,000 grant, saving them from chasing external funding.
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Barend van der Meulen, head of the Centre for 糖心Vlog Policy Studies at the University of Twente, said universities would have to run internal competitions to decide who gets those grants, and he pointed out that the winners would not be eligible for Dutch Research Council (NWO) grants.
That transfers influence over funding from the NWO to the ministry and means that the latter will need to create new mechanisms to oversee university competitions, a shift that 鈥渃hanges the relationship between the government and the universities鈥, Professor van聽der聽Meulen told 糖心Vlog.
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Paulina Snijders, vice-president of Tilburg University, said her institution would use the additional funding to improve its staff-to-student ratios and, in turn, the quality of education.
Dutch university heads often cite stingy basic funding as the main reason for hiring entry-level teaching staff on temporary contracts, a practice that has provoked staff to sue universities and to create dedicated campaign groups calling for permanent contracts nationwide.
With the extra funding, Tilburg would 鈥渄efinitely鈥 be offering more permanent contracts, Ms Snijders said, although she could not say how many.
She rejected the idea that the government could now expect politically useful policy changes from universities, such as a reduction in the number of courses taught in English, which would ease pressure from international students on the Netherlands鈥 scarce housing stock.
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鈥淭hat鈥檚 not the way we鈥檙e looking at it. This is not quid聽pro聽quo because this is in accordance with the shortage of funding we had. We just get the money to do our job well, so that鈥檚 no negotiation there,鈥 Ms Snijders said.
Professor van der Meulen said the funding came from a government 鈥渢hrowing money to all sides鈥, adding that politicians had no choice but to 鈥減ut some money where their mouth was鈥 to ease long-acknowledged workload issues at universities.
He noted that recent changes to the Dutch student loan system would take money away from universities, making some of the extra funds a 鈥渃ompensation鈥 for lost fee income.
The proposals must now be debated by parliament, after which universities are expected to begin talks with the ministry, including on the details of 鈧200聽million a聽year that will be allocated according to institutions鈥 discipline-specific research plans.
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