The Scottish and Welsh Governments have issued a joint statement
on the Erasmus+ exchange programme.
The statement, agreed by Further and Higher Education Minister
and Welsh Minister for Education , says the UK Government’s decision not to associate
with Erasmus will reduce opportunities for all learners and cut
support for the most deprived communities. It confirms that the
Scottish and Welsh Governments will explore how both countries
can continue to enjoy the benefits offered by Erasmus+.
Joint statement between Scottish and Welsh Governments on
Erasmus+
The Scottish and Welsh Governments have always been united in our
view that participation in Erasmus+ is in the best interests for
the whole of the UK. The UK Government’s decision not to
associate to the programme is therefore deeply disappointing: a
decision that will see support for our most deprived communities
cut, and opportunities for all our learners reduced.
Our participation in Erasmus+ has helped transform the lives of
thousands of our students, schoolchildren, teachers, adult
learners and young people, from all across the UK. In Scotland
proportionally more participants have gone abroad through
Erasmus+ than from anywhere else in the UK, while proportionally
more visitors from the rest of Europe have visited Scotland in
return. Schools in Wales have led the UK in winning Erasmus+
funding for strategic partnership projects on innovative topics
such as green energy, artificial intelligence, and promoting
inclusivity in the classroom.
Erasmus+ is about so much more than just university exchanges. In
fact, when taken together, more Erasmus+ funding is set aside for
further education, schools, adult education and youth groups than
for universities. Participating in an Erasmus+ exchange has
proven to increase people’s self-confidence, cultural awareness,
second-language learning ability, and employability. What’s more,
these benefits are most pronounced for participants coming from
the UK’s most deprived areas, and those furthest removed from
traditional education.
The UK Government’s proposed alternative, by comparison, is a
lesser imitation of the real thing. The Turing Scheme, funded at
£105 million for one year, pales in comparison to Erasmus+, which
has now had its budget for the next seven years increased to
€26.2 billion. Turing will offer no funding to the international
partners that are needed to allow mobilities to take place unlike
Erasmus+, where both parties are awarded funding to facilitate
the exchange of learners from one country to another. Turing will
also fail to support any of the strategic partnerships currently
supported by Erasmus+, which help to build relationships with
partners in Europe.
Furthermore, Turing will offer no support whatsoever for our
adult education or youth work sectors, while support for our
colleges, schools and vocational education and training sectors
will be significantly reduced, with limited amounts of funding
being made available to each. In doing this the UK Government is
sending a message that only universities are deserving of full
support, and that those in other forms of education – often from
our most deprived communities – are not. They are taking away
opportunities from our most vulnerable learners, and in doing so
reinforcing pre-existing inequalities.
It is all the more unacceptable then that the UK Government is
looking to impose this inadequate scheme upon Scotland and Wales
through new legislation that overrides the devolved nature of
education. We have been clear that what they are proposing is
simply not good enough, and that instead any replacement funding
for Erasmus+ should be given in the first instance to the
Scottish and Welsh Governments, to allow us to exercise our right
to deliver educational services within our respective nations.
We will carry on making these arguments, and continue to advocate
for those sectors who once enjoyed the benefits of Erasmus+, and
who have been abandoned by the UK Government.
We have been heartened by the outpouring of support from across
Europe for our continued participation in Erasmus+. This is
something that Wales, Scotland, and Europe all want; the UK
Government stands isolated in its opposition. We want the whole
of the UK to stay, but we will now explore how Scotland and Wales
can continue to enjoy the benefits offered by Erasmus+.