Tertiary Update Vol 14 No 1
What could yesterday's spending cuts mean for tertiary education?
Prime Minister John Key announced yesterday that he intends to reduce the government's already diminished government operating allowance – the allowance for new spending in the 2011 Budget –from $1.1 billion to $800 million.
"Nonetheless, this year’s Budget
will continue to prioritise new spending to health and
education in particular, and to initiatives that promote
economic growth," stated Mr Key.
With Treasury
already forecasting government spending
to fall by over $200 million between now and 2014, even
before Mr Key's announcement, further reductions in new
spending would likely translate into further cuts. Tertiary
education represents about 6 percent of government
spending. It would need to receive a significance and
disproportionate share of the only $800 million of new
spending that the government is budgeting to avoid further
cuts. For individual tertiary education institutions
this could mean hundreds of thousands of dollars difference
to their forecast funding.
CTU policy director
and economist Dr Bill Rosenberg says that saving about $300
million will have very
little effect on reducing debt – it only equates to
one week of debt payment.
"But it will hurt in
the additional pressure it will place on government services
like health and education," says Dr
Rosenberg.
Also in Tertiary Update this week:
- Polytechnic rolls grow to all time high
- Tertiary education will feel inflation pressures
- Commission faces more job cuts
- NZ academic salaries gaining on Australia
- Govt funds research trade show for businesses
- Other news
Polytechnic rolls grow to all time high
Student enrolments at many of the country’s institutes of technology and polytechnics are at an all-time high according to James Buwalda, spokesperson for the New Zealand Institutes of Technology and Polytechnics (NZ ITP).
Applications at some
Institutes of Technology and Polytechnics (ITPs) are up 10
percent from the same time last year and with NCEA results
released this week, NZITP says providers can expect another
surge in applications.
Dr Bulwalda says that
there is growing competition for available
places.
“The Government has funded 455 more
student places at ITPs for 2011, but increased demand is
surpassing that so unfortunately people are still going to
be turned away.”
Dr Bulwalda believes it is
too early to assume, at this stage, that record high rolls
combined with reduced government funding will result in
growing student: staff ratios.
"The more
fundamental question is how the teaching practice in
polytechnics is going to evolve over time. On one level,
undoubtedly there is pressure to become more cost efficient,
and student: staff ratios are one way of doing that. But it
is also important to focus on good outcomes for teaching;
giving students every chance of success. That is about the
total student experience. A simple metric of student: staff
ratios does not do justice to the total student
experiences."
Instead Dr Bulwalda believes that
ITPs will be focusing on the Tertiary Education Commission's
measurement of completions and progressions.
"ITPs need to do what it takes to improve their own
statistics around completions and progressions. If they
are doing that, they are giving the students who do enrol
the best chance of success."
Tertiary education to feel inflation pressures
Inflation figures released last week by Statistics NZ show that while the consumer price index (CPI) rose 4 percent last year the cost of tertiary and further education rose 6.4 percent. The sharp increase in inflation was influenced by a rise in goods and services tax (GST). There was a 2.3 percent increase in CPI for the December quarter, which was the largest quarterly increase since the last time GST increased in the September 1989 quarter.
Tertiary education costs however did
not rise at all during the December quarter, as would be
expected. The 6.4 percent increase in the cost of tertiary
education was recorded all at the beginning of the year when
most students pay fees and so does not yet include the flow
on costs from the increase in GST.
As well as
facing the increased costs of higher GST and inflation when
buying goods, tertiary institutions will also find they have
less money this year from government, with government
funding forecast to fall
every year until at least 2014.
TEU National
President Sandra Grey said it was time someone in government
did the maths. Currently we have less government funding
every year, more students, and higher costs.
"It's not hard to see that the other side of that equation
is skyrocketing fees, staff redundancies and pressure on
high quality New Zealand education," said Dr
Grey.
Meanwhile, CTU secretary Peter Conway said
that we can expect to see the inflation
rate go higher in the year ahead.
"Real
wages are falling as a result, causing New Zealand to drift
further and further behind Australia. The Government must
take all these factors into account when it considers the
upcoming annual adjustment to the minimum wage."
Mr Conway said that employers can expect unions to be
seeking appropriate wage increases this year which take all
factors into account including the on-going effect of higher
prices.
Commission faces more job cuts
The Public Service Association (PSA) announced last week that the Tertiary Education Commission plans to cut up to 123 jobs.
The restructuring proposal
also includes 39 new jobs, so would mean about 80 of the
approximately 300 jobs currently at the Commission would be
lost. About 40 of the threatened jobs are currently
vacant.
PSA national secretary, Brenda Pilott,
said that the proposal did not include any plans to reduce
the workloads of the remaining staff.
Ms Pilott
said staff, who were already under pressure after the
Commission cut about 70 jobs 18 months ago, were concerned
they may not be able to keep up with the workload if the job
cuts go ahead. The National Party came to government during
the last election with a policy to "clarify the role of the
TEC, trim its bureaucracy and streamline its
functions".
TEU national president Sandra Grey
said that while some of the Commission's tasks had been
transferred to the Ministry of Education, tertiary
institutions and their staff will be worried about the
ability of the Commission to provide institutions with
effective and timely support given the proposed massive
reduction in staff and funding.
Sir Wira
Gardiner, who chairs the Commission, told the New
Zealand Herald it was "a fair question" to ask whether
the Commission could maintain its services in spite of the
cuts.
Sir Wira said the board was also aware that
the Commission was operating "in a capped
environment".
"There is no more money, and so
what we have to do with the money that we've got is try to
do better."
Consultation on restructuring at the
Commission is due to be completed, and recommendations
implemented, by the end of May.
NZ academic salaries gaining on Australia
Results of a recent survey of Commonwealth universities reveal that the gap in purchasing power between the average academic in New Zealand and Australia has narrowed considerably, from 40 percent in 2006-2007 to 21.5 percent in 2009-2010.
The
survey, the seventh undertaken by the Association
of Commonwealth Universities (ACU), looks at academic
salary scales and associated benefits in 46 institutions
across seven Commonwealth countries: Australia, Canada,
Malaysia, New Zealand, South Africa, and the United
Kingdom.
New Zealand academics rank fifth out of
the six commonwealth countries surveyed, when purchasing
power is considered, having been overtaken by South African
academics since the previous survey.
Natasha
Lokhun from ACU says the differences in average salaries
between the countries have reduced. She attributes this to
increased international competition for academic staff, as
well as efforts within individual countries to improve
academic salary levels.
TEU national Secretary
Sharn Riggs says the comparative improvement of academic
salaries in New Zealand relates significantly to the $50
million of tripartite funding available to universities
under the previous government.
"Union members
in New Zealand universities campaigned successfully to close
the pay gap with Australia. We had important successes up
until 2008 - 2009 but now, with the demise of the tripartite
funding and cuts to other government funding and the
on-going austere budgeting at most tertiary institutions,
New Zealand academics risk falling behind again," said Ms
Riggs.
Govt funds research trade show for businesses
The New Zealand Herald reports that the government is funding a trade show at AUT next month promoting university research to businesses. More than 200 business people are expected to attend and seven of New Zealand's eight universities will be represented at the show.
The
trade shows are funded through the University
Commercialisation Office of New Zealand, which was formed in
2005 to bring the universities' commercialisation offices
together.
The government
funding – provided through the Tertiary Education
Commission mirrors government's current policy direction
that research coming out of New Zealand's tertiary education
institutions should have greater applicability to
businesses. For instance, the Commission's PBRF funding
guidelines last year placed greater emphasis on commercial
research and the entrepreneurial application of
research.
AUT vice-chancellor Derek McCormack
said several other shows had been held and more would be
held this year, giving 14 in total over two years. The shows
were being held to demonstrate to businesses the benefit of
working with universities and using their
research.
"This event is more about raising
awareness for the business sector on working with
universities than just commercialising research," said Mr
McCormack.
"The programme was put forward by
Business New Zealand, which was concerned universities were
not interested in working with businesses. But for the
universities that wasn't true. We were very interested. So
this is a way to bring the two together and build a
relationship."
Other news
Prospects for students have gone from bad to worse, with a three-yearly survey showing increased joblessness, debt and pessimism, student advocates say. The 2010 student income and expenditure survey, run by the New Zealand Union of Students' Associations since 1994, shows average loan debt had increased by 31 per cent to $15,558 since 2001. In just three years, the number of students with a job plummeted by 25 per cent to 65 per cent – Dominion Post
University of Canterbury research
has revealed that overall academic performance by
undergraduate students at UC in semester two of 2010 was as
good as that during the same period in 2009. “While we
acknowledge that the earthquake and subsequent aftershocks
may well have had a serious effect on some individual
students, it appears that student performance in general was
not negatively affected by the 4 September earthquake," said
a member of the UC research team, Psychology Professor Simon
Kemp - University
of Canterbury
New Zealand has the best
education system in the world according to Britain's Legatum
Institute, which has been attempting to produce
different kinds of indices to mainstream economic scales.
The institute says New Zealand’s strong education system
inspires high levels of public confidence.
President of the Dominican Republic Leonel Fernández has
announced that a new university in Haiti will be completed
by 12 January 2012 - the second anniversary of the
devastating earthquake. It will be built in the northern
city of Cap Haïtien at a cost of US$30 million. The
institution will be a public university, in a country where
private universities were proliferating before the
earthquake –University
World News
Victoria University is
being accused of discriminating against mature students.
Special admission students - those older than 20 who did not
achieve university entrance at high school - are being asked
to supply a CV and a one-page "personal statement"
explaining study objectives, and may be required to complete
English and maths assessments - Dominion
Post
TEU Tertiary Update is published weekly on Thursdays and distributed freely to members of the Tertiary Education Union and others. You can subscribe to Tertiary Update by email or feed reader. Back issues are available on the TEU website. Direct inquiries should be made to Stephen Day, email: stephen.day@teu.ac.nz