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Economic Development

Cardiff University taking actions to ensure a projected £65m deficit not realised

The university is looking to reduce its deficit to £28m at the end of its current financial year

Cardiff University(Image: Cardiff University)

Cardiff University said its deficit would rise to £65m in its current financial year if costing saving measures are not implemented. It has also confirmed that the increased employer national insurance contributions will create a £7m-plus annual financial hit, which would far exceed any further rise in domestic student tuition fees.

Like many universities, Wales’ only Russell Group institution, is facing significant financial challenges, particularly from inflationary pressures and a sharp fall in the number of postgraduate international students - due to visa restrictions for family members - who pay the highest tuition fees.

Earlier this year the university's vice-chancellor Professor Wendy Larner said the university was faced with a £30m deficit - the difference between its running costs and income generated (that includes student fees and research council funding).

However, it said at the start of its current financial year - at the beginning of August - its deficit would increase to £65m at year end without taking actions on costs and driving incomes. As a result the university’s governing body, in its council, has agreed a reduced deficit position of £28m at the end of its current 2024-25 financial year.

This will require closing a funding £37m gap, which it said it hopes to achieve by a combination of reducing non-pay related costs, including travel and IT, savings from a voluntary severance scheme, which it will reopen in January, and income from increased student numbers.

It said the end of year shortfall would be made up by using reserves, but that such an approach was not sustainable in the long-term.

The university, for its yet to be signed off 2023-24 financial accounts, after cost-saving measures, has a current standing deficit of £32.8m.

However, at the start of this current financial year it said it was facing a £65m deficit without cost saving measures. The increase was fuelled by a £16m pay award, a £6m cut in grant funding from the ’s funding body for universities and colleges, Medr, and £17m from the impact of inflation on running costs, which have been felt most in energy charges. The university employs around 8,000 staff and has 32,000 students