The State’s seven universities say they cannot afford to wait for the outcome of a Government working group on how to fund higher education in the future, such is the scale of the financial crisis now facing the sector.
The Irish Universities’ Association says a series of austerity measures, including a further €250 increase in the student charge this year and a one per cent cut in core pay, are simply “not sustainable”.
Ned Costello, chief executive of the organisation, which is holding an international symposium on the challenge in Dublin today, welcomed a decision by the former minister for education Ruairí Quinn to set up a committee to examine funding models.
But the expected 18-month timeframe before reporting stage “fails to recognise the urgency of the issue”, and he says “there is too much at stake to jeopardise our future through complacency or prevarication”.
Paying more getting less
Writing in
The Irish Times
today, Mr Costello warns that austerity is leading to students paying more but getting less for their education. “As a first step, the current policy of disinvestment must be arrested. We can then plan for the future and look at issues such as how a sustainable fee regime can be implemented.”
The reporting timeframe of the working group will push any decision on funding beyond the lifetime of the current Government, which has come under fire for reneging on pre-election promises not to raise the student charge.
Today’s conference “21st Century Universities: Performance and Sustainability” will hear from Mr Quinn’s successor Jan O’Sullivan as well as a number of international education experts.
Keynote speaker Art Hauptman, a US education public policy adviser, says universities cannot depend entirely on the public sector to fund rapidly growing demand.
“The biggest issue facing Irish higher education is not the level of national investment but the mix of public and private funding.”
He says the key for Ireland is “to increase its level of private investment while maintaining public investment levels in higher education. This can be done in several ways that don’t require extraordinary sacrifice from parents and students”.
Student loans proposal
Already, a number of university presidents have expressed preference for a student loans system like that in Australia as a suitable model for Ireland.
Demographics have added to the financial crisis, with the number of students in higher education set to rise to 146,834 in 2016 from 129,564 in 2009, according to department figures.
Between 2008 and 2014, there has been a decline in income per student of 22 per cent, the IUA notes. In addition, there has been “virtually no new state investment in capital infrastructure in Irish universities and colleges since 2008”, and 40 per cent of the system’s infrastructure is now below standard according to the HEA.
There has been an overall decrease in exchequer funding of all higher education institutions by 32 per cent in the past six years.
The association is also concerned about attempts to increase Government controls over university spending. A series of instances of unauthorised spending has led to plans for a Universities Bill.
However, the universities argue that it will limit their ability to recruit “star” academics, and respond quickly to market trends, with a view to building their international reputation.