• Capped tuition fees will see UK universities lose more than £17bn in income in real terms over the next four years, as inflation remains persistently high.
  • Universities have already lost about £6bn in real terms since 2017, with the pace of losses accelerating.
  • Amid such financial constraints, more innovative use of technology is absolutely key to helping universities deliver more with less.

29 August 2023 – UK universities are set to lose more than £17bn in real income over the next four years as persistent inflation erodes the value of tuition fees, according to research from higher education software provider TechnologyOne.

Universities have already lost about £6bn in real terms since 2017, with the pace of losses accelerating. Higher education institutions lost roughly £1.42bn in the 2021-22 academic year, almost ten times the amount it lost in 2017-18 (£145m). Despite UCAS predicting a rise in student numbers, by 2027 universities are expected to be losing £5bn to inflation each year.

Tuition fees for domestic students have been capped at £9,250 since 2017, giving universities limited options to offset the impact of rising prices. TechnologyOne’s findings bolster university Vice-Chancellors’ recent concerns about the ‘broken’ tuition fees model.1

Universities are increasingly turning to international students to plug this funding gap – UCAS projects a 60% increase in international students in its ‘Journey to a Million’ report, with a 75.6% increase in higher education applicants from outside the EU. However, even a marked rise in the influx of international students is unlikely to offset the deficit. Given the financial constraints, leveraging smart technology is key to helping universities do more with less

It’s not just universities feeling the pressure. TechnologyOne research from March found that students had seen their cost of living rise by 13.6% over the previous year, around a fifth more than the price rises felt by the general public.

Leo Hanna, Executive Vice President at TechnologyOne in the UK, said: “Universities have no room for error when it comes to spending decisions, as their financial constraints will only increase over the next four years.

If tuition fees remain fixed, the higher education sector must prioritise long-term forecasting, especially given the forecast uptick in student demand. Universities need access to streamlined and comprehensive data to make informed decisions.

For this, the technology at the core of a university has never been more important, smart investments made today will be crucial in helping universities find savings and serve students better tomorrow. More effective flows of data, which an integrated SaaS enterprise resource planning solution enable, help departments drive intelligent digital services and improved decisions on investment.”

Vanessa Wilson, University Alliance CEO, said: “The analysis from TechnologyOne is a stark illustration of how bad things could get for the university sector over the coming years. Universities now make a loss on every home undergraduate, and that loss is set to grow with inflation. This is evidently financially unsustainable in the long term and will ultimately impact on student and staff experience, for example through deteriorating facilities or a reduction in staff:student ratios or student support services.

Universities are more than just institutions of teaching and research, they are economic anchors for their communities, supporting innovative businesses to scale and grow and delivering the technologies and skills for new industries to flourish. An unsustainable university system makes for a less stable economy in all areas.

To preserve the high quality of our sector and our ability to attract investment, talent and world-class research it is vital that the higher education provider unit of resource be restored to 2012 levels as soon as practically possible. We believe this can be achieved in the short term through a combination of effective policies, regulatory reform and top-up funding. At the same time, universities will naturally also be looking at their own systems to ensure they are running as efficiently as possible. Innovative universities like those that University Alliance represent know that technology will be at the heart of driving effectiveness and efficiency.”

Media contact
Miette Lelievre
PR Advisor
M: +61 428 940 628
Miette_Lelievre@technologyonecorp.com

About TechnologyOne

TechnologyOne is a global Software as a Service (SaaS) company. Founded in Australia, we have offices across six countries. Our enterprise SaaS solution transforms business and makes life simple for our customers by providing powerful, deeply integrated enterprise software that is incredibly easy to use. Over 1,200 leading corporations, government departments and statutory authorities are powered by our software.

Our global SaaS solution provides deep functionality for the markets we serve, including local government and higher education in the UK. For these markets we invest significant funds each year in R&D. We also take complete responsibility to market, sell, implement, support and run our solutions for our customers, which reduce time, cost and risk.

Methodology

University tuition fees have been frozen for domestic undergraduate students in the UK at £9,250 per year since the 2017-18 academic year. Combining this with ONS inflation data, TechnologyOne calculated the real terms decline in tuition fee value per student . The company used UCAS applicant data (2021, 2022) and HESA student data to calculate the total value lost across the higher education system each year. Using UCAS forward projections and Bank of England inflation projections, TechnologyOne modelled the total amount universities will lose to inflation each year up until 2026-27.


TechnologyOne used HESA data on students’ study locations to calculate the size of an average university in the UK. The company multiplied this figure by the real-terms decline in tuition fee value per student to arrive at the value lost to inflation at an average university in the UK.


To calculate the value lost in tuition fee loans, TechnologyOne used data from the Student Loans Company to calculate the total and average amounts paid in tuition fee loans since 2017. The company combined this with ONS inflation data to calculate the amount lost to inflation on an average tuition fee loan from 2017-18 to 2021-22.

YearFeesCPIH annual rateUprated feeFee lost per studentTotal UK UG studentsTotal value lost

2017 - 2018

£9,250

1

£9,342.5

£92.5

1,569,930

£145,218,525

2018 - 2019

£9,250

2.6

£9,585.41

£335.41

1,578,455

£529,429,592

2019 - 2020

£9,250

2.3

£9,805.88

£555.88

1,589,820

£883,749,142

2020 - 2021

£9,250

1.7

£9,972.59

£722.58

1,693,460

£1,223,660,327

2021 - 2022

£9,250

1

£10,072.31

£822.31

1,734,805

£1,426,547,500

2022 - 2023

£9,250

2.5

£10,324.12

£1,074.12

1,755,621

£1,885,748,032

2023 - 2024

£9,250

Est. 9.7

£11,325.56

£2,075.56

1,769,371

£3,672,434,788

2024 - 2025

£9,250

Est. 3

£11,665.33

£2,415.33

1,807,170

£4,364,912,712

2025 - 2026

£9,250

Est. 1

£11,781.99

£2,531.99

1,851,909

£4,689,014,978

2026 - 2027

£9,250

Est. 0.4

£11,829.12

£2,579.12

1,902,529

£4,906,851,614

Average university losses

YearAverage uni sizeFee lost per studentAverage lost per university

2017 - 2018

7,315

£92.5

£676,638

2021 - 2022

7,659

£822.31

£6,298,072

Publish date

29 Aug 2023
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