Delegated Legislation Committee School and Early Years Finance
(England) Regulations 2018 The Committee consisted of the
following Members: Chair: Albert Owen † Chalk, Alex (Cheltenham)
(Con) † Champion, Sarah (Rotherham) (Lab) Coffey, Ann (Stockport)
(Lab) † Fletcher, Colleen (Coventry North East) (Lab) † Gibb, Nick
(Minister for School Standards) † Graham, Luke (Ochil and South
Perthshire) (Con) † Hall, Luke (Thornbury and Yate)...Request free trial
Delegated Legislation Committee
School and Early Years Finance (England) Regulations 2018
The Committee consisted of the following Members:
Chair:
† Chalk, Alex (Cheltenham) (Con)
† Champion, Sarah (Rotherham) (Lab)
Coffey, Ann (Stockport) (Lab)
† Fletcher, Colleen (Coventry North East) (Lab)
† Gibb, Nick (Minister for School Standards)
† Graham, Luke (Ochil and South Perthshire) (Con)
† Hall, Luke (Thornbury and Yate) (Con)
† Hoare, Simon (North Dorset) (Con)
† Jones, Susan Elan (Clwyd South) (Lab)
† Kane, Mike (Wythenshawe and Sale East) (Lab)
† Knight, Sir Greg (East Yorkshire) (Con)
† Milling, Amanda (Cannock Chase) (Con)
† Platt, Jo (Leigh) (Lab/Co-op)
† Shah, Naz (Bradford West) (Lab)
† Vickers, Martin (Cleethorpes) (Con)
† West, Catherine (Hornsey and Wood Green) (Lab)
† Whately, Helen (Faversham and Mid Kent) (Con)
Joseph Watt, Committee Clerk
† attended the Committee
Ninth Delegated Legislation Committee
Wednesday 21 March 2018
[Albert Owen in the Chair]
School and Early Years Finance (England) Regulations 2018
8.55 am
-
(Wythenshawe and Sale East)
(Lab)
I beg to move,
That the Committee has considered the School and Early
Years Finance (England) Regulations 2018 (S.I. 2018, No.
10).
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship this
morning, Mr Owen. I can feel the palpable energy in the
room, among Members and officials alike, from being in the
House this early for a Statutory Instrument Committee.
The context for the debate is the Conservative manifesto
statement:
“Under a future Conservative government, the amount of
money following your child into school will be protected.
There will be a real terms increase in the schools budget
in the next Parliament.”
That pledge was repeated, and the previous Prime Minister
was clear about what it meant:
“I can tell you, with a Conservative Government the amount
of money following your child into school will not be cut.”
But the Government are not keeping that promise to the
British people. Under the present Government, schools face
the first real-terms cuts to their budgets in nearly 20
years, despite the Secretary of State’s having
inadvertently claimed the opposite in the House last week.
The National Audit Office has said that under the current
spending settlement there will be
“an 8 per cent cut in pupil funding”
between 2015 and 2020. The same conclusion was reached by
the Institute for Fiscal Studies. That means that every
school in every region and town will lose money because of
the Government’s failure to protect funding in schools. The
so-called fair funding formula—there we are at last—is
simply a redistribution of a sum of money that is already
inadequate to support schools and provide children with the
excellent education that they are entitled to.
The National Audit Office has also said that the Department
for Education expects schools to find a total of £3 billion
savings in the course of the Parliament, yet it has failed
to communicate to them how to achieve it. Of course I
support the principle that all schools should receive fair
funding, and there are progressor elements in some of the
regulations before the Committee, but the answer is not to
take money from schools and redistribute it when budgets
are being cut across the country.
-
(Hornsey and Wood
Green) (Lab)
Does my hon. Friend agree that some schools now tell
parents that they have to close at 1 o’clock? They give
various reasons, but we all know that they do not have the
money to pay teachers in the afternoon. Does he agree that
although that may not be unlawful, specifically, it takes
vital study time away from young people?
-
I could not agree more. Schools are having to make heinous
decisions. In the Minister’s county, West Sussex, some are
already threatening a four-day week because of the budget
cuts.
-
(Faversham and Mid
Kent) (Con)
Does the hon. Gentleman welcome the real-terms funding
increase that schools across the country are getting
between now and 2020?
-
The hon. Lady was recently quoted in KentOnline boasting
about a 0.5% real-terms increase in school funding, but
when inflation in education is running at 3% or 4% that
will be a massive cut for schools in her area.
-
It is a real-terms increase.
-
The Chair
Order.
-
The solution is to invest, to help every child receive an
excellent education. The Government’s stated aim in
revising the schools funding formula is fairness. There
should be fairness in the formula, and there are good
things in it, such as the emphasis on high need, a
deprivation index—albeit using a crude measure—and a focus
on prior attainment. Why would the Opposition not welcome
those things? However, there is nothing fair about a
proposal under which funding will be cut from
high-performing schools in deprived areas.
A fair approach would take the best-performing areas in the
country and apply the lessons from those schools
everywhere. It would look objectively at the level of
funding required to deliver in the best-performing schools,
particularly in areas of high deprivation, and use that as
the basis for a formula to be applied across the whole
country. Unfortunately, though, the Government are not
listening to the voices of schools, teachers or parents.
Evidence from the general election suggests that 750,000
people switched their votes to Labour because of the impact
of school funding cuts on their local communities.
We only have to look at the impact already being played
out. Under this Government more than half a million infant
schoolchildren are in super-sized classes, and new research
by leading education unions shows that class sizes are
rising in the majority of secondary schools in England as a
result of the Government’s underfunding of education. There
is a particular problem in secondary schools because of the
shortfall in funding of £500 million a year for 11 to
16-year-olds between 2015-16 and 2019-20, plus the deep
cuts to sixth-form funding of more than 17% per pupil since
2010.
-
My hon. Friend is being generous with his time. Subjects
such as music are now offered at A-level only in one school
in a large area. It is therefore any surprise that under
44.1% of the Royal Academy of Music’s intake come from
state schools?
-
I am grateful to my hon. Friend. I am a product of the
Manchester music service, and the music education that I
received as a child is nowhere near what we now provide in
our schools. We now have secondary schools in Yorkshire
charging parents for music GCSEs. My final point on class
sizes is that 62% of secondary schools in England have
increased the size of their classes.
-
(Rotherham)
(Lab)
As my hon. Friend brought up Yorkshire, it would be remiss
of me not to intervene. He also talked about 16-to-18
colleges, and another hit for them is that they are charged
VAT. Thomas Rotherham College, a great college that gave a
broad curriculum, had to cut its curriculum size right
down, and giving a holistic education has become so
unviable that it has been forced to become an academy. That
makes one wonder if there is a grand plan at play.
-
I could not agree more. The curriculum is being narrowed
for a whole series of reasons, but the main one is severe
funding cuts in our schools.
I have talked about class sizes, and the second huge impact
is teacher numbers. Staff numbers in secondary schools fell
by 15,000 between 2014-15 and 2016-17 despite their having
4,500 more pupils to teach. There is a huge recruitment and
retention crisis. The Times Educational Supplement says
that we will be short of 43,000 secondary school teachers
in the next few years. The figures are being masked by the
greater supply in primary schools. That equates to an
average loss of 5.5 staff members in each school since
2015. In practical terms that means 2.4 fewer classroom
teachers, 1.6 fewer teaching assistants and 1.5 fewer
support staff in every school.
Cuts to frontline teaching posts are happening at a time
when pupil-to-teacher ratios are rising, which means bigger
classes and less individual attention for children.
Research published only last week by the Education Policy
Institute shows how many schools have been struggling
financially and are now in deficit.
-
(Leigh) (Lab/Co-op)
Does my hon. Friend agree that cuts to other public
services and mental health services in particular are
putting undue pressure on our schools, given their teacher
resource capacity?
-
I am grateful to my hon. Friend for that extraordinarily
valid point. We know from our postbags that a rising number
of parents cannot get special educational needs and
disability provision for their children because schools are
having to cut that and less specialist services back at
local authority level. Local authorities have been cut—they
have lost around 30% to 40% of their budgets—which has had
a direct impact on the services that schools can buy in.
The number of local authority-maintained secondary schools
in deficit has nearly trebled, which means that more than a
quarter of all such schools are now in deficit. In 2016-17,
the proportion of primary schools in deficit increased
significantly, to 7.1%. The average primary school deficit
also notably increased from £72,000 in 2010-11 to £107,000
in 2016-17.
Perhaps the most worrying finding was that a large
proportion of local authority maintained schools are now
spending more than their income, and 40% of those
secondaries have had balances in decline for at least two
years in a row. Similar figures are found for local
authority maintained primaries; in 2016-17 more than 60%
were spending more than their income. A quarter had had a
falling balance for two years or more.
The Education Policy Institute report points to the
inevitable outcome of the growing budget pressures. Staff
account for the majority of spending by schools, at around
two thirds. It is therefore likely that schools will find
it difficult to achieve the scale of savings necessary
without cutting back on staff. What is the Government
response? Only last week we found that the new Education
Secretary had been forced into an embarrassing U-turn after
he claimed wrongly that school spending is going up. That
is the message they would like to put out. The constant
delay of the fair funding formula led to constant
Conservative press releases about fixing funding in our
schools, but that has been far from the case.
-
(Bradford West) (Lab)
Does my hon. Friend agree with me that in places such as
Bradford West where we have an excellent cluster of
maintained nurseries, we are still not sure where the
funding is coming from? If it is coming, will it be to meet
the existing deficit—from special needs, early years and so
on—or will it be new money?
-
The biggest impact we can have as civil society and
government on the social mobility and educational
attainment of our young people is in the early years, but
our Sure Start centres have been decimated over the past
few years, with no guarantee—absolutely none—of what their
future will be. My hon. Friend makes a very valid point.
The Secretary of State originally said:
“We know that real-terms funding per pupil is increasing
across the system, and with the national funding formula,
each school will see at least a small cash
increase.”—[Official Report, 29 January 2018; Vol. 635, c.
536.]
Last week, however, he had to respond to the House on that.
What had Sir David Norgrove, head of the UK Statistics
Authority, pointed out? He had said that funding was being
frozen in real terms until 2020, not increased. The
Secretary of State therefore had to write to correct the
record.
I have a few questions for the Minister. One of the major
issues is whether he will confirm that the regulations
allow for a 1.5% cut in funding per pupil in cash terms.
Our evidence suggests that they do, so that is a fair
funding formula that allows for a 1.5% cut in funding in
cash terms. Will he confirm that the Government will not
increase overall pupil funding? As the Institute for Fiscal
Studies has said, the additional £1.3 billion announced
after the election last year keeps funding basically flat
in real terms over the next two-year period. Will he
confirm that? Will he also confirm that funding has fallen
in real terms since 2015? For example, the National Audit
Office reports an accumulated £2.7 billion cut from school
budgets since 2015, despite the regulations before us.
The national funding formula consultation has been delayed
and delayed, and pushed back and pushed back after the
election. Looking at the regulations, the formula has been
a colossal waste of time, effort and money, and has come
with that delay. The Government have come to a conclusion
that only tinkers with the edges of the funding crisis in
our schools. For now, I will leave it there.
9.09 am
-
It is a real pleasure to serve under your chairmanship once
again, Mr Owen.
I want to put some real figures into our debate. We keep
hearing about “real terms” funding and savings, so let us
put some real figures in there. Rotherham has 88 primary
schools and 14 secondary schools, and there have been real
cuts to their funding in the past couple of years. In
2015-16, income was £4,150 per primary school child and
£5,876 per secondary school child. However, by 2017-18,
funding had dropped to £3,954 for that same primary school
child and to £5,587 per secondary school pupil. Looking
forward to 2019-20, under this funding formula, schools
will receive £3,965 per primary school child and £5,518 per
secondary school child. Collectively, the primary schools
in Rotherham are losing £4,404,897, and the secondary
schools are losing just over £5 million. The hon. Member
for Faversham and Mid Kent said there had been a real-terms
increase. I am sorry, but funding has fallen in real terms
since 2015.
-
Does my hon. Friend agree that those cuts are landing in
places with the most deprivation, such as her constituency
and mine?
-
My hon. Friend is absolutely right. We were hoping for a
funding formula that recognised the different pressures in
different areas. A blanket funding formula does not
recognise the real issues we have in the north of England
in particular.
The IFS states that overall, school funding will have
fallen by 4.6% in real terms between 2015 and 2019. We do
not know the real impact of the next round of cuts, but
perhaps the Committee can make an informed assessment by
looking at what happened in the previous two years. Between
2014-15 and 2016-17, class sizes rose by 54% in primary
schools and by 50% in secondary schools. In the same
period, the ratio of pupils to teachers rose by 61% in
primary schools and by 71% in secondary schools. The ratio
of pupils to teaching assistants rose by 58% in primary
schools and by 79% in secondary schools.
-
Does my hon. Friend agree that that is having a big effect
on morale in schools? Did she know that a position to learn
to be a teacher in a primary school in my constituency that
once attracted 150 applicants now attracts 10?
-
I did not know that, but it pains me to hear it. When I was
going through school and university, people aspired to
become a teacher. Teaching was a secure career in which
people felt they were giving something back to their
community. Now, it is seen as something to try to escape
from, and we do not attract the best people to be teachers.
That is such a shame. The impact on future generations is
immeasurable.
Why has there been such a dramatic rise in the ratio of
pupils to staff? It is not rocket science. To try to bridge
the gap between their costs and the income they get under
this Government, schools have had to lose staff. In the
same period—2014-15 to 2016-17—staff cuts in primary
schools increased by 44%, and cuts to secondary teaching
staff in Rotherham rose by a staggering 93%.
Using that as my evidence, I guess that class sizes in
Rotherham will increase again for the next two years under
this Government. Schools will be forced to cut more staff,
so the pupil to staff ratio will increase. There is no
evidence—if anyone can show me some, I would welcome
that—that bigger classes lead to a better education. I have
not discovered evidence of that anywhere in the world. To
be honest, all the evidence points to bigger classes
leading to worse education.
Are children in Rotherham worth a good education? Is it a
surprise that we have some of the highest rates of
exclusion and youth unemployment when there is not enough
money to pay for an adequate number of teaching staff? I am
afraid that things will only get worse under the
regulations. The minimum funding guarantee in the local
formula is currently set at minus 1.5%. That is a guarantee
that no school can lose more than 1.5% of its per pupil
funding year on year as a consequence of changes to the
local funding formula. Paragraph 8.4 of the explanatory
memorandum states:
“The new level of flexibility around the MFG set out in
these Regulations will allow local authorities to set the
MFG at any value between -1.5% and +0.5%, allowing them to
replicate this element of the national funding formula at a
local level if they choose.”
The second stage of the consultation underlined the
importance of stability in funding levels for schools. As a
result, the national funding formula will allocate a cash
grant of at least 0.5% per pupil for every school. This new
MFG flexibility will enable local authorities to pass those
gains on to schools, but here is the but—as of yesterday
the CPI inflation rate dropped, woohoo, to 2.7%. Even if
the local authorities had the cash to apply the maximum
funding of plus 0.5%, schools would still be losing 2.2% in
real terms. Perhaps that is why paragraph 10.3 of the
explanatory memorandum says:
“An Impact Assessment has not been prepared for this
instrument.”
One wonders why.
-
The Minister for School Standards (Nick Gibb)
Because it does not affect the private sector.
-
I appreciate the clarification from the Minister.
I would now like to ask him a couple of specific questions,
if he can answer them. Let me quote part 3, chapter 1,
regulation 13(3):
“The date for ascertaining pupil numbers is 5th October
2017.”
I will give an example of why that is likely to present
problems in my constituency. In an area of Rotherham called
Eastwood, we have quite a large Roma population and I have
spoken to a number of my primary schools to discover what
happens. Children tend to be signed up for the autumn term
and start in September but then go missing, reappearing
later in the year. I am concerned that class sizes might
have increased after 5 October but the funding might not
follow that.
In addition, because we have a lot of cheap privately
rented accommodation, a lot of asylum seekers are sent to
Rotherham. They come throughout the year, so what happens
to pupil funding if, again, they arrive after 5 October? I
am not sure whether the Minister has some money ring-fenced
for when classes ebb and flow but his response would be
most helpful, because I know it is an issue for my schools.
Regulation 18(3), in the same chapter, states:
“For the purposes of this regulation, a child is disabled
if he or she is paid or entitled to disability living
allowance by virtue of section 71 of the Social Security
Contributions and Benefits Act 1992.”
My hon. Friend the Member for Wythenshawe and Sale East
mentioned special educational needs and how late children
are now getting statements. In my constituency it is
getting increasingly hard to get statements because of
access to the services that can do the assessment. A child
might enter a school without a statement but after a couple
of years get a diagnosis, for example, of autism. Would the
additional money follow through with that child, once the
diagnosis is in place?
My final point concerns chapter 2, regulation 27, which
discusses how funding will be clawed back from maintained
schools if a child is excluded. Does that provision also
apply to academies?
9.19 am
-
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mr Owen.
I am pleased to be able to discuss the school and early
years finance regulations at a time when local authorities
are about to receive their first grant payments calculated
by the national funding formula—an historic and necessary
reform.
The regulations set out how local authorities should
distribute between local schools the £33.7 billion of
funding that they collectively receive through the schools
block of the dedicated schools grant. Before I turn to the
regulations, it is important to place them in the context
of the historic change that the Government have made to the
broader funding system. The introduction of the national
funding formula means that, for the first time, this £33.7
billion of funding will be distributed between local
authorities based on the individual needs and
characteristics of every school in the country.
The Government are determined to create an education system
that offers opportunity to everyone at every stage of their
lives. That is the key to raising standards for all and
improving social mobility. We are making significant
progress: more schools than ever before are rated good or
outstanding, the attainment gap is beginning to close and
we have launched 12 opportunity areas to drive improvement
in parts of the country that we know can do better.
However, those achievements have been made against the
backdrop of the old, unfair funding system, which we have
reformed. Under the old system, schools across the country
with similar pupil characteristics have received markedly
different levels of funding for no good reason.
-
Will the Minister explain whether more schools being rated
as good or outstanding, which is happening in many of our
constituencies, is linked to a higher rate of exclusions?
-
We have launched an exclusions review, conducted by our
former colleague, . He will look at precisely
those issues. We actually raised the bar for Ofsted’s
judgments on schools. Despite our raising the bar for
academic standards, we are still seeing more schools rated
as good or outstanding.
In the hon. Lady’s constituency of Hornsey and Wood Green,
schools would attract 0.9% more funding if the national
funding formula were implemented in full, based on the
2017-18 data. Under the national funding formula, schools
in Hornsey and Wood Green will be funded at £5,671 per
pupil, compared with the national average of £4,655 per
pupil.
-
In that case, will he direct two schools that insist on
closing at 1 pm on a Friday, which parents have raised with
me as an issue, to open their gates until 3 pm?
-
As she will know from the figures I just cited, schools in
her constituency are being funded at significantly higher
than the national average.
-
That does not answer the question, Minister.
-
I am coming to the hon. Lady’s question. Given that schools
in Hornsey and Wood Green are being funded at significantly
more than the national average, and given that the vast
majority of schools are not doing the things she talks
about, there is no reason for schools in her constituency
to take that action.
Across the country, schools with similar pupil
characteristics have received markedly different levels of
funding. That is why our promise to reform this unfair,
opaque and outdated school and high needs funding system
and introduce a national funding formula has been so
important, and I am particularly pleased that this
Government were able to deliver on that.
This reform represents the biggest improvement in the
school funding system for more than a decade. From April
2018, the introduction of the national funding formula will
put the funding system firmly on track to deliver resources
on a consistent and transparent basis, based on the
individual circumstances of every school in the country.
Following extensive consultation, in which we carefully
considered more than 25,000 individual responses to our
proposals, last September we were able to publish full
details of the school and high needs national funding
formulae and the impact they will have on every local
authority.
Those proposals were underpinned by an additional £1.3
billion for schools and high needs across 2018-19 and
2019-20, over and above the funding confirmed at the 2015
spending review. School funding is at a record high because
of the choices we have made to prioritise school funding,
even as we faced difficult decisions elsewhere to restore
our country’s finances.
-
I visited the launch of the Bradford for Teaching
initiative, trying to get teachers in. The truth is that
when I talk to teachers, and those amazing people who want
to teach, I hear that the funding formula does not allow
the schools to get the best teachers in. It is not just
about the children; the impact on the level of teaching in
places such as Bradford West really needs to be looked at.
These solutions are just not good enough.
-
There are two points. First, we have only been able to
deliver these high levels of spending on schools, rising
from £41 billion this year to £42.4 billion next year and
£43.5 billion the year after, because the way in which we
have managed the economy means we can afford to do so. A
Labour Government, particularly a Labour Government under
the current leadership—any future Government led by the
party opposite—would bankrupt our economy and there would
be no chance of any of these increases in funding coming
into our public services. We have to have a strong economy
first of all. Secondly, responding to the hon. Lady’s
point, schools in Bradford West, as she should know, would
attract 1.3% more funding if the national funding formula
were implemented in full, based on the 2017-18 data. That
is equivalent to £1.4 million more funding for those
schools.
-
Having campaigned for the fairer funding formula on behalf
of my Kent constituency, I welcome the formula. For many
years, similar schools with similar pupils in other areas
were getting significantly more money than schools in my
area.
-
It is 0.5%.
-
It gives children in my constituency a fairer chance of
getting the good education they need, coupled with rising
funding. It is truly welcome.
-
The hon. Member for Wythenshawe and Sale East said from a
sedentary position that it is 0.5%. Schools in Faversham
and Mid Kent would attract 6.4% more funding if the
national funding formula were implemented in full based on
the 2017-18 data. That is equivalent to £2.7 million, so I
understand why my hon. Friend the Member for Faversham and
Mid Kent made her intervention.
The new funding formula will be fairer. The additional
funds mean, as I have said, that spending will rise from
£41 billion this year to £43.5 billion by 2019-20. As the
independent Institute for Fiscal Studies has confirmed,
that will allow us to maintain schools and high-need
funding in real terms per pupil for the next two years. I
hope that answers the comments made by the hon. Member for
Wythenshawe and Sale East. As the IFS also pointed out, by
2020 real-terms funding per pupil will be 70% higher than
it was in 1990, and 50% higher than it was in 2000.
-
When the Minister was talking about the increases over the
next two years, I did a quick bit of maths. The increase
seems almost to keep up with inflation, but there does not
seem to be any additional money on top of that. Does the
Minister agree?
-
I will come to the cost pressures that schools have faced
in the last two years, particularly the increase in the
employers’ contribution to teachers’ pensions—we regard
teachers’ pensions as very important—and the higher level
of the employers’ national insurance contribution. Again,
the higher employers’ national insurance contribution is
about raising more tax revenue to help close the historic
deficit we inherited. Achieving the reduction of that
deficit to 2% of national income, from 10% when we came
into office, has enabled us to maintain a strong economy.
We acknowledge that there have been cost pressures on
schools in that period. Those cost pressures have now been
absorbed and schools will see real-terms increases across
the board in their funding, taken as a whole.
-
The Minister is extremely generous in giving way to me a
second time. Will he comment on the increase to NHS staff
today? Will we hear a further announcement in a few months’
time that there may be more money for teachers, given that
there tends to be a knock-on effect when one public sector
group gets a pay increase? Not that any arguments were won
last June, I hasten to add.
-
The hon. Lady raises an important point. We have given
evidence to the School Teachers Review Body; the Secretary
of State gave oral evidence a week ago. We will receive its
recommendations, I think, in May and we will respond to
them then. It is important that these issues are dealt with
by independent pay review bodies.
With the additional £1.3 billion that we were able to
identify last summer, we have been able to ensure that all
schools and all areas will attract some additional funding
over the next two years while providing for up to 6% gains
per pupil for the most underfunded schools. That
significant extra spending in our schools demonstrates our
commitment to ensuring that each child receives a
world-class education. The hon. Member for Wythenshawe and
Sale East cited our manifesto; we have gone further than
our manifesto commitment that no school should lose funding
as a result of the national funding formula. Now, every
school in every area will attract at least 0.5% more per
pupil in 2018-19 than it received in 2017-18, and 1% more
in 2019-20.
We also heard throughout our consultation on the formula
that we could do more through our formula to support those
schools that attract the lowest levels of per pupil
funding. We listened to those concerns, and our formula
rightly will direct significant increases towards those
schools. In 2019-20, the formula will provide minimum per
pupil funding of £4,800 in respect of every secondary
school, and £3,500 in respect of primaries. In 2018-19, as
a step towards those levels, secondary schools will attract
at least £4,600, and primary schools £3,300. These new
minimum levels recognise the challenges of the very lowest
funded schools.
There was considerable debate during the consultation on
the funding formula about how much funding it was
appropriate to direct towards schools with higher numbers
of pupils likely to need additional support—I welcome the
hon. Gentleman’s support for that element of the national
funding formula—as a result of a disadvantaged background,
low prior attainment, or because they speak English as an
additional language. In our final formula, we have been
able to protect this funding—£5.9 billion in 2018-19—while
improving its targeting. Alongside that, we will continue
to deliver the pupil premium— some £2.5 billion a year—to
provide additional support to schools to narrow the
attainment gaps and to promote social mobility. As I
mentioned earlier, we have closed the attainment gap by 10%
in both primary and secondary schools since 2011.
The dedicated schools grant provides local authorities with
funding for their high needs provision and for early years.
We are absolutely committed to supporting children who face
the greatest barriers to their education. That is why we
have also reformed the funding for children and young
people with high needs, by introducing a high needs
national funding formula. That will distribute funding for
children and young people with high needs more fairly,
based on accepted indicators of need in each area.
The additional spending that we have announced means that
every local authority will see a minimum increase in high
needs funding of 0.5% in 2018-19, and 1% in 2019-20.
Underfunded local authorities will receive gains of up to
3% per head a year for the next two years. Overall, local
authorities will receive £6 billion to support those with
high needs in 2018-19. We are also determined to support as
many families as possible with access to high-quality,
affordable childcare. That is why in 2019-20 we will spend
a further £6 billion on childcare support—a record amount
of support. This record spending includes £1 billion a
year, delivering 30 hours of free childcare for the working
parents of 3 and 4 year-olds and funding the increase in
rates that we introduced in April 2017.
-
I welcome the fact that the Minister talks about childcare,
as that is one of the quickest and most effective ways to
bridge the gender pay gap and to get women back into work.
The National Audit Office says that Sure Start funding,
which is very close to my heart, has been cut by £763
million since 2010. How does that fit into the Minister’s
attempt to support all children?
-
We have to marshal our resources. A lot of the statistics
cited on Sure Start are to do with buildings and not the
provision of services in those buildings. Schools in
Rotherham would attract 4.5% more funding if the national
funding formula were implemented in full, based on the
2017-18 data, coming to £2.9 million. Under the national
funding formula, schools in Rotherham will be funded at
£4,982 per pupil, compared with the national average of
£4,655.
-
Does the Minister agree that losing investment in early
intervention and prevention is having a huge knock-on
effect on school readiness for children, and therefore on
attainment? Should the NAO figures on the closure of Sure
Start centres not be taken seriously, and should we look
again at investing in early intervention and prevention?
-
We take those issues seriously and the hon. Lady raises an
important point. However, the attainment gap between those
from disadvantaged backgrounds and their more fortunate
peers in primary schools has closed by 10%, and there has
been a huge increase in children’s ability to read. We are
moving from joint 10th place to joint eighth place in the
international reading surveys of nine-year-olds, and there
has been a huge increase in the proportion of six-year-olds
who pass the phonics check—in 2012, 58% passed, but 81%
passed in 2017.
-
Look at the social mobility figures. Why are a record
number of people unable to get on when they leave if
attainment is good in our schools?
-
We have some of the lowest levels of young people not in
education, employment or training —lower, certainly, than
under the previous Labour Government. We have very low
levels of youth unemployment compared with other countries
in the European Union, and we have the lowest level of
unemployment in this country for 42 years. That is the
consequence of proper stewardship of our public finances
and our economy. That is how we provide opportunities and
social mobility, ensuring that more people have the
opportunity to earn a pay packet, and pay their rent,
mortgage and bills. I will give way to the hon. Member for
Rotherham.
-
The Minister is incredibly kind and intuitive, and I thank
him for giving way without my asking—[Laughter.] He could
see that I was willing him to do that; he is a good man. I
would love him to come to Rotherham. I am grateful for the
£20 uplift per primary school child that comes on top of
the cuts we have sustained for the past eight years, but
£20 will buy us a book and a couple of pots of paint; it
will not deal with the decades of deprivation faced by my
constituents. I understand that the Minister is genuinely
trying to come up with a fair funding formula, but life is
not fair. In Rotherham we have had so many knocks and lost
so much industry that a small increase is not enough to get
us to the standard of a school in Surrey, for example. I
urge the Minister to reconsider.
-
I would be delighted to go to Rotherham again. I was the
candidate there in 1994 in a by-election. I thoroughly
enjoyed my stay, and I was delighted narrowly to beat
Screaming Lord Sutch. The hon. Lady raises an important
point, and the £2.9 million extra funding is equivalent to
about £214 per pupil in Rotherham. I would be delighted to
come and see some schools in Rotherham soon.
-
Given that the Minister is in the mood to travel to
Yorkshire, perhaps he could come to West Yorkshire and
visit my constituency of Bradford West. We have had this
discussion previously, but the real-term cuts to SEN, and
the immense pressures on local authorities to deliver on
education have had a real impact in my community. I would
appreciate the Minister coming a few miles up the road to
West Yorkshire so that I can introduce him to headteachers
of schools in my constituency.
-
I would be delighted. The hon. Lady and I have discussed
education in her area, and I know how passionate she is
about improving academic standards in schools in her
constituency. I would, of course, be delighted to visit
some schools in her constituency with her in the very near
future.
Under these regulations, the national funding formulae will
allocate the schools, high needs and central school
services blocks of the dedicated schools grant fairly to
local authorities. The school and early years financial
regulations govern how local authorities can distribute
that funding between schools and early years providers, and
they apply for the coming financial year. Regulations that
have recently been made will replace those for 2017-18.
In 2018-19 and 2019-20, local authorities will continue to
set their own local funding formulae for schools, which
will determine individual schools’ budgets in their areas.
Those formulae are set following consultation with local
schools. It remains the Government’s clear intention to
move, in time, to a system in which each school’s
individual budget is set directly by the national funding
formula without local variation. That will ultimately
ensure that similar schools will receive similar funding,
regardless of where they are situated.
However, by continuing to allow a small but important
element of flexibility for local authorities over the next
couple of years, the regulations will be able to help to
smooth the transition to the national funding formula at a
local level. They set the rules within which local
authorities must operate as they set their local formulae.
The changes we have made to the regulations for 2018-19,
compared with 2017-18, enable local authorities to mirror
the national funding formula for schools in their local
formulae. Unless we make these regulatory changes, they
would not be allowed to do that. Many local councils have
decided that they should replicate the national funding
formula in their local formulae. We support that decision,
which is a strong vote of confidence in the principles
behind our national funding formula.
The regulations need to be made each year, and for the most
part, the 2018 regulations simply ensure that the rules set
in the 2017 regulations will continue in place. The changes
we have made are intended to enable local authorities to
mirror the national funding formula.
The changes on school funding are, first, the introduction
of an optional minimum per-pupil funding level—the £4,600 I
mentioned—which local authorities can now use as a factor
in their local funding formulae to ensure that every school
receives a minimum amount of funding for each pupil. Unless
we pass the regulations, local authorities would not have
the discretion to do that.
I do not understand why the Opposition prayed against the
regulations. The hon. Member for Wythenshawe and Sale East
raised the -1.5% minimum funding guarantee. That is the
current position. Currently, if a local authority wants a
minimum funding guarantee to smooth the effect of any
changes to the local formula, to ensure that no school can
lose more than -1.5% per pupil when a local formula
changes, it can introduce that minimum funding guarantee.
We have changed that in the regulations to give local
authorities more flexibility, so that, instead of the
option of -1.5%, they can now also vary the amount, up to
+0.5%, which is the minimum funding guarantee in the
national funding formula.
By praying against the regulations, the hon. Gentleman is
entrenching in the rules for the local funding formula a
minimum funding guarantee of -1.5% and preventing local
authorities from having a +0.5% minimum funding guarantee,
which we have introduced into the national funding formula.
Secondly, the regulations on indicators of deprivation have
also changed. Local authorities can choose to use a
combination of the free school meals, Ever 6 free school
meals and income deprivation affecting children
index—IDACI—formulae. Thirdly, there are also some
technical changes regarding looked-after children and the
scaling factor used to set funding for pupils with low
prior attainment.
The hon. Member for Rotherham also raised issues about
significant growth in pupil numbers in constituencies. She
cited regulation 13, which is designed to tackle precisely
the problem she refers to. Regulation 13(4) states:
“Where (a) there is or may be an increase to the published
admission number at the school; or (b) the school is
subject to a prescribed alteration that may lead to an
increase in the number of pupils at the school, the
authority may, instead of ascertaining pupil numbers on 5th
October 2017, include an estimate of pupil numbers.”
That will help schools to ensure that they have the proper
funding as a consequence of a growth in their numbers.
The change to the high needs regulations removes an
adjustment that was previously made to schools’ five to
16-year-old pupil numbers to reflect the number of places
that the local authority has reserved for children with
special educational needs. From 2018-19, five to 16
year-old pupils in such places will attract funding to
their school through the local formula on the same basis as
all other pupils at the school. Local authorities will have
additional funding of £6,000 for each place from the high
needs budget.
We introduced a new early years funding formula in April
2017; therefore, the regulations for 2018-19 are largely
unchanged from 2017-18. The changes we have made in these
regulations implement previously announced policy or are
amendments intended to bring greater clarity to existing
policies. For example, when we introduced our new funding
formula, we announced that from 1 April this year, local
authorities must pass on 95% of the national funding
formula funding allocation to providers. That is up from
93% in the previous year, and it is an important change in
these regulations.
How funding is used in practice is just as important as its
fair distribution. We are committed to helping schools to
improve pupil outcomes and promote social mobility by
getting the best value from all their resources. School
efficiency must start with, and be led by, schools and
school leaders, but the Department provides practical
support, deals and tools that will help all schools improve
their efficiency. We will continue our commitment to
securing national deals that procure better value goods and
services in areas that all schools purchase. Schools can
already save an average of 10% on their energy bills and
around 40% on printers, photocopiers and scanners. Those
deals have already saved schools over £46 million.
Across school spending as a whole, we are improving the
transparency and usability of data, so that parents and
governors can more easily see how funding is being spent
and understand not just educational standards, but
financial effectiveness. We will continue to expand our
package of support for schools so they can ensure every
pound is achieving the best outcome for pupils.
The hon. Member for Wythenshawe and Sale East raised the
question of teacher numbers. We have record numbers of
teachers in our schools: we have 457,000, up 15,500 since
2010. Last year we achieved 89% of our secondary target for
graduate recruitment and 100% of our primary target.
Returners are rising, from 13,000 in 2011 to 14,200 in
2016. We have tax-free bursaries of up to £26,000 for
priority subjects. People often talk about retention; 70%
of teachers are still in teaching after five years and 60%
are still in teaching after 10 years, but the important
point is that that figure has remained broadly constant for
the last 20 years.
Class sizes have not shifted very much: they are about 27.1
in primary and 20.5 in secondary schools, on average.
-
Will the Minister confirm that there are more teachers
because there are more pupils, that one third of teachers
have left teaching since they trained since 2011 and that
education authorities have not filled one third of
vacancies for teacher training courses next year?
-
There were a number of points there. First, the pupil
numbers have increased; we have created 735,000 new school
places since 2010, and one of the first things we did in
2010 was double the amount of capital spending on creating
new school places. The previous Government had cut school
places, particularly in primary schools, where 200,000
places were cut during that period despite knowledge of the
increased birth rate.
The hon. Gentleman’s figure of 33% leaving teacher training
who joined in 2011 is the 30% figure I was referring to;
there are 70% still in teaching after five years. That is
broadly the same figure that it has been for the last 20
years. People change their minds after starting a
profession, and that figure has not changed significantly
over the past 30 years.
I forget what the final issue was that the hon. Gentleman
raised, but he also mentioned the report by the Education
Policy Institute, which I think came out last week. We do
not recognise the findings of that report, because the
latest figures show that schools hold surpluses of more
than £4 billion against a cumulative deficit of less than
£300 million. We trust schools to manage their own budgets,
and only a small percentage are operating a cumulative
deficit. We are providing support to help those schools get
the most out of spending.
I thank the Opposition again for securing this debate. For
this Government, providing a high-quality education for
every child is a top priority. The additional funding we
have announced, together with the introduction of a
national funding formula, will provide schools with the
resources they need to deliver that. The school and early
years finance regulations represent a vital piece in the
funding jigsaw, making it possible for local authorities to
make funding fairer at a local as well as a national level.
By doing so, we can continue to drive school standards ever
higher.
9.49 am
-
So there we have it—that is the silver bullet, and a way to
get the Government out of the political hole that the
previous Government got into over getting fair funding for
schools; we are left with a variance of 1.5% down or 0.5%
up. The hon. Member for Cheltenham is in the room, and I
hope that he had a good weekend, by the way—it seems to be
a great festival. However, he has been quoted by
Gloucestershire Live as saying that the national funding
formula needed “major surgery”. What we are considering is
not even a minor intervention.
The Minister said that the manifesto commitment was that no
schools would lose money. That was the commitment—not that
no schools would lose money because of the national funding
formula. Manifesto commitments are not something that can
be made up as you go along. It is incredible that there can
be a funding formula with so much variance, so that schools
can still receive a cut because of it.
The Minister was good with his facts, and in replying to my
hon. Friend the Member for Hornsey and Wood Green he talked
about schools in her constituency. Perhaps I may point out
the £82,000 cut affecting St. Catherine’s Catholic Primary
School in his constituency, and the reduction in pupil
funding of £355 per pupil. Schools in West Sussex are
threatening a four-day week. That, in the Minister’s back
yard, is incredible.
-
The hon. Gentleman is wrong about his facts. I tend to know
the schools in my own constituency quite well, and every
school in my constituency will receive an increase in
funding according to the national funding formula. Many of
the schools there are receiving significant increases—way
above the 0.5% that some schools are receiving.
-
Again, that is a sophist argument that some schools will
receive an increase, but not in terms of the general level
of cuts since 2015; and it is nothing in comparison with
what the Minister rightly pointed out about budget pressure
and inflation. All the schools in his constituency will be
taking a cut over the next few years.
-
A similar problem has been mentioned to the one in my
constituency, where schools are cutting the school day, and
I hope that the matter will be raised again, to prevent a
domino effect that might lead to a four or
four-and-a-half-day week. That would have a huge impact on
productivity in the economy, as much as anything.
-
My hon. Friend is a passionate advocate on behalf of
schools in her constituency. The way she stands up for them
will be on the record.
There is only one party represented here today that has had
a reprimand about dodgy stats on schools: the Secretary of
State received one from the UK Statistics Authority last
week. The Opposition will not take lectures on statistics
at the moment. The funding formula has been a colossal
waste of time and effort and has not got to where the
Minister wanted. I can see from the reactions of some
Conservative Back Benchers that the same situation will
continue. Schools in their constituencies will be under
enormous pressures, and what has been done has not ended
the situation.
The Minister talked about having to rescue the economy. The
Government have led us to a nearly £2 trillion deficit in
the economy.[Interruption.]
-
The Chair
Order.
-
The reason the Opposition will vote against the regulations
is that Labour was extraordinarily clear, with a fully
costed manifesto at the general election. [Hon. Members:
“To increase the debt.”] There is a lot of tutting from
Conservative Members, but the only numbers in the
Conservative manifesto were the page numbers. We had a well
costed manifesto. At the general election, our policy on
school funding was to reverse the cuts. That is what we
said in June.
-
The Chair
Order. We have had a great opportunity for wide-ranging
debate. The hon. Gentleman is now concluding it. If hon.
Members want to carry on, they can do so in the Tea Room.
-
Thank you, Mr Owen.
That would have led to an increase in real terms, which
would have left per pupil funding at a record high and cost
about £4.8 billion in the final year of this Parliament.
That is what Labour committed to: investment in schools and
our pupils, compared with disinvestment and cuts from the
Government Benches.
Question put.
Division 1
21 March 2018
The Committee divided:
Ayes: 9 Noes: 7 Ayes: 9 Noes: 7
Question accordingly agreed to.
View Details
Resolved,
That the Committee has considered the School and Early Years
Finance (England) Regulations 2018.
9.56 am
Committee rose.
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