Conservatives must see higher education as it is, not how they fear it might be
The Government’s White Paper on Skills is a good moment to assess where the Parties are on universities and apprenticeships

The UK has slightly above average Higher Education participation – 50 per cent of young people under the age of 25. Higher education is paid for more by graduates (about ¾) and less by taxpayers (about ¼) than most other advanced countries. It is hard to see much extra public spending going into universities so funding them by collecting the money back from graduates when their earnings are above a certain threshold is sensible.
This a fair and effective model though unloved. There is no alternative.
There are widespread misconceptions about it shown in a recent survey by the King’s Policy Institute. Parents worry that the “debt” will directly reduce the amount that their children can take out as a mortgage. 35 per cent of people wrongly think graduates must start paying back their student loan as soon as they get any paid job, rising to 58 per cent of young graduates. In reality it is a 9 per cent deduction on income above £25,000 per year. So for the typical the amount they pay back is much less than the extra they earn compared with non-graduates.
Our universities score highly in international rankings but that is heavily influenced by research quality.
Teaching is much harder to measure.
The 25 per cent real cut in resource for educating every student over the past decade has led to an increase in class sizes and made it harder for universities to invest in modern equipment for teaching science and engineering. These cuts have been invisible to most people apart from students but represent a failure to invest in the next generation. They lose and we all lose from such cuts which would not be acceptable in schools and ought not to be for universities. If taxpayers won’t pay, we must expect graduates to do so by increasing fees. There would be no increase in anyone’s monthly repayments.
That is what at last the Labour Government proposes in the White Paper. In return there will also be tougher monitoring of teaching standards, as Jo Johnson planned years ago. Such a deal, at least maintaining the real level of funding whilst pressing hard on standards is in everyone’s interest.
The Conservative leadership seems pretty hostile to higher education and reluctant even to accept that funding needs to be protected from inflation – not a position they adopt on any other stage of education. Some of this may reflect public attitudes and the current media narrative. However the research by King’s College is very illuminating. The public guess that 40 per cent of graduates wouldn’t go to university if they could choose again. But the actual proportion of graduates who wouldn’t go again is 8 per cent. It is 40 per cent of non-graduates who regret not going to university by the age of 25.
The public also underestimate the economic impact of universities. They think aircraft manufacturing and telecommunication services contribute more in exports. But higher education brings in a greater amount of money than both these sectors put together. (The figures are £11.8b and £8.8b with HE at £24.6b). The public guess that five in ten people think a university education isn’t worth the time and money it usually takes – but only three in 10 really hold this view.
Tory voters are not hostile to HE.
To read the full article, tap the button in the 'Links' section on this page.
Discover David Willetts' Work
Explore more of David's work and learn more about his professional career.
