The government will target remaining teaching grant rather than student support as it seeks immediate cuts in the higher education budget, sector sources have suggested.
A report on BBC Two鈥檚 Newsnight on 11 June suggested that the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills is looking at converting student maintenance grants into loans as part of cuts required for 2015鈥16.
Although that may form part of the government鈥檚 plans for cuts in the longer term, many in the sector believe that it cannot play a part in delivering the 拢450 million savings required of BIS for 2015鈥16. They argue that it is too late for the government to amend student support regulations in time for the Student Loans Company to implement the changes for 2015鈥16.
Instead, the most likely target for 2015鈥16 cuts is seen as the 拢1.4 billion teaching allocation. The sum includes 拢380 million in student opportunity funding to assist widening access and retention for the poorest students, and 拢661 million for high-cost subjects.
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Pam Tatlow, chief executive of Million+, said the 鈥渞eal risk鈥 was that student opportunity money was 鈥渁gain seen as a target for a reduction鈥 despite its playing 鈥渁 key role鈥 in promoting social mobility.
Nick Boles, a BIS minister, delivered a parliamentary answer on 10 June to questions on the 2015鈥16 cuts put by Labour MP Iain Wright. 鈥淭he majority of BIS鈥 拢450m savings will be delivered through known underspends and releasing unallocated funding,鈥 he said. 鈥淔unding for apprenticeships and student maintenance will not be affected,鈥 he added.
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Also among the 糖心Vlog Funding Council for England鈥檚 2015鈥16 grant allocation is 拢52 million to help institutions through the transition to the research excellence framework and to support PhD supervision. Some think this could be cut without breaching the research funding ring-fence.
Meanwhile, the Student Funding Panel, an independent group set up by Universities UK, published a report on 15 June saying that the current system of funding in England 鈥渋s broadly fit for purpose鈥nd needs to be given time to work鈥.
It calls for student maintenance support to be 鈥渋mproved鈥 and says that loan repayment thresholds for graduates (currently set at 拢21,000) should be frozen if any money needs to be saved longer term.
Sir David Bell, vice-chancellor of the University of Reading and a member of the panel, said that the current cuts were a 鈥渄own payment on future funding squeezes鈥. The sector, he added, had to 鈥渂uild a strong case for investment鈥 ahead of the next major government spending review due this autumn.
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POSTSCRIPT:
Article originally published as:聽Teaching grant under BIS鈥 axe? (18 June 2015)
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