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Economic Development

Cardiff University academics publish alternative plan for job cuts and savings

The alternative plans includes extending the savings timetable by two years to the 2027-28 academic year

Cardiff University.(Image: WalesOnline/Rob Browne)

A group of Cardiff University academics have put forward an alternative plan to address the university’s £31m-plus deficit in the face of sweeping cuts proposed by management.

In January, the university announced that it proposed shedding 400 academic jobs – since scaled down to 355 – and shut degree courses and academic schools including nursing, modern languages, music, ancient history, religion and theology.

The savings are subject to an ongoing 90-day consultation with 1,400 staff still under the threat of their jobs being at risk. Now a group of academics has written an alternative proposal to get the institution back on track.

The proposal, edited by Wales’ former education minister and now Cardiff business school professor Leighton Andrews, is due to be published by the group today.

Their alternative plan is to extend the savings timetable by two years to the 2027-28 academic year and to reduce deficits to record a surplus by 2028-29. As well as a longer timescale to balance the books, they say the university should also draw on some of its legally available reserves – which they estimate is £285m.

Under this plan, academic schools would be handed the reins for making the cuts over a longer period and via natural wastage, voluntary redundancy and a freeze on recruitment and promotions. The suggestion is that individual departments can take responsibility for delivering “realistic contribution levels and staff/student ratios” in this way.

The university should also instigate discussions with the Welsh Government to review higher education finance and student support, the plan adds. Cardiff Bay should be encouraged to continue to argue to the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ Government for lifting visa restrictions on international students, introduced last year and which bar most from bringing dependents with them.

Cardiff, along with many other universities across the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ, has been hit by a triple whammy of rising bills, largely static home tuition fees and a fall in the number of higher-paying international students.