Today the National Audit Office (NAO) reports that while the
Department for Education (DfE) has spent significant amounts of
money aimed at helping individual colleges in financial difficulty,
core funding for the sector as a whole has fallen and its financial
health remains fragile.
The financial health of the college sector has
fluctuated in recent years. Between 2013/14 and 2018/19, the
sector’s overall operating position went from an £8.5 million
surplus to a £45.7 million surplus, which followed a £70.3
million deficit in 2017/18. The proportion of colleges reporting
an operating deficit fell from 37% in 2013/14 to 34% in
2018/19.
Between September 2015 and March 2017, government
oversaw a programme of ‘area reviews’, partly designed to improve
colleges’ financial stability. The reviews, which led to 57
college mergers, are likely to have helped limit the financial
deterioration of the sector. Between 2015-16 and 2019-20,
government provided 45 colleges with £431 million to help cover
the costs of mergers and other structural changes, mostly in
grants rather than loans. 46% of this funding (around £197
million) was used to help colleges reduce their commercial
borrowing.
In addition to this funding, the Education and Skills
Funding Agency (the ESFA) has paid £253 million to 36 colleges
with serious cashflow problems, much of which will not be repaid.
The ESFA has categorised £99.9 million (39% of the total) as
non-repayable and, at March 2020, £61.6 million (just less than a
quarter of the total) had been repaid. Between April 2019 and May
2020, the ESFA also spent another £26.6 million dealing with two
colleges going through a new insolvency process,1
although it expects to recoup some money from the
sale of assets no longer required for educational
provision.
The NAO found that, at February 2020, government was
intervening in nearly half of colleges with the aim of preventing
or addressing financial difficulty, and intervention often takes
a long time.
In recent years, core funding to colleges has fallen.
DfE funding per student aged 16 to 19 fell by 7% in real terms
between 2013/14 and 2018/19. Although the national basic funding
rate for learners aged 16 to 17 has remained at £4,000 per
student since 2013, in 2014/15, DfE reduced the rate for students
aged 18 to £3,300, even though the basic cost of teaching
18-year-olds is likely to be the same as for 16- to 17-year-olds.
Total funding for adult education and support services (excluding
apprenticeships) fell by 35% in real terms over the same
period.
Despite the financial pressures, at August 2019 more
than four in five colleges were graded as good or outstanding by
Ofsted. However, financial constraints have meant that colleges
have narrowed their curriculum and reduced broader support for
students, such as careers advice and mental health services. This
is likely to have detrimental effects on students and the
development of skills.
Most of the fieldwork for the NAO report was
undertaken between November 2019 and March 2020 before the
COVID-19 pandemic. Although government has put in place measures
to support colleges, more colleges are expected to face financial
difficulties following the pandemic.
DfE is currently drawing up a 10-year reform
programme to address a range of challenges in the further
education sector. The NAO recommends that this programme should
set out a clear vision for the role, structure and funding of the
college sector. DfE should also assess systematically the extent
to which colleges have dealt with financial pressures by
narrowing their provision and reducing support
services.
, the head of the NAO, said:
“Colleges play a crucial role in many
people’s lives and are vital in the development of the skills and
knowledge the country needs. While there has been some progress
in improving financial security in the sector, this has cost a
lot of money, and systemic long-term weaknesses remain
unresolved.
“DfE needs to seize the opportunity presented
by its 10-year reform programme to set out what it wants from the
college sector and ensure it is funded
accordingly.”
- ENDS -
Notes for
Editors
-
Hadlow College entered ‘education administration’
in May 2019, and West Kent and Ashford College in August
2019.
-
Central government financial years are written as,
for example, ‘2018-19’ and run from 1 April to 31 March;
college financial and academic years are written as ‘2018/19’
and run from 1 August to 31 July.