The coalition government has praised universities as
"the driving force behind our increasingly high-tech, knowledge-based
economy" in its mid-term review.
Universities and further education were given a page and a
half in the 46-page review, published today after being launched by Prime
Minister David Cameron and Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg.
The document, titled The Coalition: together in the national
interest, offers little in the way of fresh policy directions for higher
education. The two innovations it identifies as future priorities - the
uncapping of recruitment for high-grade students and Key Information Sets - are
already well underway.
However, universities are likely to be pleased that the
review assigns them a central role in the economy, echoing recent comments by
George Osborne, the chancellor.
"For years, Britain has undervalued both the academic
and technical skills a modern economy needs," the review document says.
"This government is determined to rectify both defects."
It continues: "We are willing to take the tough
decisions needed to ensure that our universities thrive. We value them for
their intrinsic, as well as their economic, worth: as seats of learning and
research dedicated to increasing the sum of human knowledge and understanding,
and as centres of innovation and invention, the driving force behind our
increasingly high-tech, knowledge-based economy."
The review also recaps funding and student finance changes.
"We have put universities on a secure and sustainable financial footing by
increasing the maximum tuition fee to £9,000, and backed this with
income-contingent loans so that no first-time students need to contribute to
their tuition costs upfront," it says.
In a section on the future, the review says: "We will
give our world class universities more freedom to compete by giving them more
control over the number of highly qualified students they can admit, and we
will require the publication of key outcome information - such as destinations,
wage levels and student satisfaction - to guide applicants' university
choices."
And on research, it says: "We will invest an additional
£920 million in UK science research infrastructure, as set out in the Autumn
Statement."
Mr Cameron and Mr Clegg say in their foreword to the review:
"Whether it is reducing the deficit, rebalancing the economy, regulating
the banks, tackling climate change, modernising our energy and transport
infrastructure, putting our universities on a sustainable financial footing or
dealing with the challenges of an ageing population and reforming public sector
pensions, we have consistently chosen to do what is right over what is easy or
popular; what is in our country's long-term interest over our parties'
short-term interest."
Source: 7 January 2013, Times Higher Education by John Morgan
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