In return, employers could offer bonuses to support graduate recruits鈥 student loan repayments, according to the Royal Society for the encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce鈥檚 (RSA) City Growth Commission.
It argues that universities鈥 public funding means that they have a responsibility to 鈥減ower鈥 metropolitan growth and to align themselves more closely with local economic priorities, warning that strong labour market flows among higher education leavers currently 鈥減resent a challenge to matching supply and demand for graduate labour鈥.
London attracts large numbers of course finishers, while other cities offer more varied prospects and some struggle to retain graduates.
The commission鈥檚 , UniverCities, suggests that local authorities and agencies should partner with higher education institutions to run 鈥渞efreshers鈥 weeks鈥 in the run-up to graduation to match students with jobs and help them find accommodation.
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It also proposes that cities should launch centralised 鈥済raduate clearing鈥 programmes which would pool graduates still looking for work and connect them with local companies that have vacancies.
These businesses could place recruits under 鈥済olden handcuffs鈥 deals under which they would receive a bonus after several years鈥 service to be put towards student loan repayments, the report recommends.
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Jim O鈥橬eill, the chairman of the commission, argued that the proposals could help to improve the UK鈥檚 economic prospects, since 72 of its universities were based within the 15 largest cities.
鈥淩elatively low numbers of graduates stay in the cities where they graduate, with many either disappearing back overseas or down to London to employ the fruits of their enhanced minds elsewhere,鈥 he said.
鈥淪urely it would be sensible to consider pursuing a number of initiatives to either help or encourage graduates to stay in the metro areas where they graduate, as a key ingredient to helping these cities prosper.鈥
Other proposals include the establishment of investment funds for higher education by councils and local enterprise partnerships, to fund research in universities that could help the area鈥檚 economy, and to address identified graduate skill shortages.
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The commission says universities could do more to encourage entrepreneurship among their graduates by partnering with business networks, allowing sandwich years and placements on all courses, and by using their own funds to invest in spin-off enterprises.
There should be more flexibility on graduate entrepreneur visas for the UK鈥檚 largest cities, the report adds, suggesting that students could be made eligible for five years after they finish their course, rather than one, providing that their business would be active in the same urban area. This model should be rolled out across the UK if it proves successful, the commission suggests.
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