The Institute for Fiscal Studies has estimated that between
2009-10 and 2019-20 school spending per pupil in England fell by
9% in real-terms.
In the 2019 and 2021 Spending Review, the government allocated
extra funding to schools and explicitly stated that this would
restore spending per pupil to 2010 levels in real terms by the
end of the parliament in 2024-25. Unexpectedly high cost
pressures on schools mean that the government is no longer on
track to deliver on this objective.
Many factors are currently acting to increase the actual costs
faced by schools, including increases in teacher salaries,
support staff pay, and food and energy prices. At the same time,
the normal measure of economy-wide inflation using to assess
real-terms changes in public spending has become more volatile
(and potentially more unreliable) in the aftermath of the
pandemic.
In new research, we estimate the actual costs faced by schools
and conclude that they are growing by more than economy-wide
inflation. In 2022-23, the growth in school costs looks just
about affordable within the government’s spending plans. But
current spending plans for future years are likely to be
insufficient to meet the cost pressures facing schools, with
implied real-terms cuts in 2023−24. By 2024−25,
after accounting for the specific costs facing schools, we
estimate that school spending per pupil will still be 3% lower
than in 2010. This analysis was funded by the
Nuffield Foundation and forms part of a larger programme of work
examining trends and challenges in education spending across
different phases.
Other key findings include:
-
School costs are expected to grow by 6% in
2022-23. We estimate that teacher pay costs will
rise by 4% in 2022-23, including the effects of last year’s pay
freeze, the 5.4% average increase in teacher salaries in
September 2022 and the new Health and Social Care Levy. Local
government employers have offered support staff pay rises of
between 4% and 10.5% in 2022-23. This implies increases in the
average cost of support staff of at least 9%. Rising energy and
food prices are driving an increase in CPI inflation, forecast
by the OBR in March to average 8% over 2022-23, which seems
likely to further increase non-staff costs.
-
But cost increases look just about affordable in
2022-23. Overall growth in funding per pupil is
relatively high this year (7.7%) and is still likely to be
above growth in school costs (6%).
-
Cost increases won’t be felt equally. A large
amount of the extra funding this year has been allocated to the
high-needs budget to reflect fast rises in the number of pupils
with special educational needs. The expected growth in total
mainstream school funding per pupil (6.8%) is only just above
expected growth in costs (6%). Schools that rely more on
support staff, such as special schools, will also likely see
faster growth in costs.
-
Real-terms cuts are likely after this
year. We project that school costs will grow by
4% in 2023-24, which is above expected growth in school funding
per pupil (3%). In 2024-25, growth in school funding per pupil
is expected to be only just above projected cost growth.
Luke Sibieta, IFS Research Fellow and author
said:
"On top of rising energy and food prices, schools now also face
the cost of rising salaries for teachers and support staff.
Within the context of a £4 billion rise in the school budget this
year, these costs look just about affordable – at least on
average. Next year looks much more problematic, however, with
growth in funding per pupil expected to fall below growth in
school costs. Indeed, the fast rises in school costs will reduce
school budgets’ purchasing power and leave spending per pupil in
2024 still about 3% lower in real-terms than in 2010.”
“The big fiscal choice for policymakers this autumn is whether or
not to provide more funding to public services to compensate for
rising costs and the significant challenges they face. It will be
that much harder for schools to meaningfully contribute to
levelling-up ambitions when they face real-terms cuts from next
year onwards”
Ruth Maisey, Education Programme Head at the Nuffield
Foundation said:
“The Schools White Paper set a target that 90% of primary pupils
would achieve the expected standard in reading, writing and maths
by 2030. However, the recent SATS results show that disruption
during the COVID-19 pandemic has led to falling attainment
levels. It is essential that the government addresses the cost
pressures highlighted by this IFS analysis, to ensure that
schools can deliver on ambitions for student attainment.”
ENDS
Notes to Editor
1. ‘School spending and costs: the coming crunch’ is an IFS
briefing note written by Luke Sibieta and will be on the IFS
website at 0001 Tuesday 2nd August
via this URL:
Read an embargoed version of the
report here.
2. This research has been funded by the Nuffield Foundation as
part of the Institute for Fiscal Studies’ Annual Report on
Education Spending (grant number EDO/43355). IFS gratefully
acknowledge funding from the ESRC via the Centre for the
Microeconomic Analysis of Public Policy (ES/M010147/1) at the
IFS.