| You are in: UK: Education | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Thursday, 11 April, 2002, 17:51 GMT 18:51 UK Minister hints at research cash ![]() Universities are calling for more money Universities should be given more cash for research a minister has said - but only if they modernise. The Higher Education Minister Margaret Hodge said spending on research in Britain's universities had fallen "outrageously behind" that of other developed countries. She said the government would need to spend �300m a year more on research and development to catch up with France and Germany. She said she would "seek to invest more" but that universities would have to modernise and reform.
"Those times have gone - if indeed they ever existed. "No institution has a God-given right to continue to function in its present form. "I expect to see a different pattern of provision in 10 years' time. "Some universities may have gone, others would have merged and some would have expanded." Student funding Mrs Hodge was speaking after university executives called on the government not to overlook higher education in the budget. The vice-chancellors - represented by the group Universities UK - said they needed �10bn funding to keep Britain as a world leader in academic research and to cater for the increase in the student population the government wants to see. The higher education minister also made it clear there would be no announcement on changes to the student support system until July, after the results of the spending review.
She said the government was facing difficult choices: "There are competing priorities in education and across governments. "It would be a gross abrogation of my duty if we focused our money on subsidising tuition and living costs of students at the expense of other competing areas for investment." That angered the National Union of Students (NUS). The union's national president, Owain James, said: "NUS would be amazed if the government chose to ignore the countless independent evidence that recognises the urgent need for maintenance support and the call from a third of its own backbench MPs to abolish tuition fees and bring back grants. "After promises from both the prime minister and the chancellor in October it is imperative that the government uses this review to get things right and that it actually delivers. "It must realise that it cannot just tinker with a failing system in the hope of masking a broken promise." Mrs Hodge said higher education was at a crossroads, and universities would need to transform management structures and break down boundaries with colleges and schools. In a series of meetings organised by the Association of Colleges, staff will lobby for what they call a "fair deal for colleges and their students". | See also: 10 Apr 02 | Education 10 Sep 01 | Education 14 Dec 01 | Education 11 May 01 | Education 27 Nov 01 | Education 21 Jan 02 | Education Internet links: The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites Top Education stories now: Links to more Education stories are at the foot of the page. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Links to more Education stories |
![]() | ||
| ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- To BBC Sport>> | To BBC Weather>> | To BBC World Service>> ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- © MMIII | News Sources | Privacy |