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PRIVACY
Economic Development

The huge financial crisis facing Welsh universities requires a national conversation to ensure they survive

The importance of universities to the Welsh economy cannot be understated and requires the Welsh Government to instigate a national conversation to ensure they can have a sustainable future

There are more than 150,000 students in Wales.(Image: PA Wire/PA Images)

Can Wales afford four professional rugby regions or sustain 22 local authorities serving a population of just over three million in the face of significant budgetary cuts? These are well-worn questions, but whether there are three regions or four, the prospect of again dusting off previous maps and proposals for local government reorganisation is not on the agenda.

But what about Wales’ eight universities? With many facing significant financial deficits, collectively spiralling north of £100m, voluntary redundancy rounds, and no guarantees that compulsory rounds will not follow, there is an urgent need for a national discussion on the purpose of Welsh universities.

Whether the outcome involves full-blown mergers, faculty closures where there is little added value, or the creation of new centres of excellence across universities and shared services, this national conversation needs to be instigated by the Welsh Government.

While private entities the role of our universities as major employers, centres of research and development, and drivers of spending from 150,000 students, is too important to the Welsh economy for the Welsh Government to bury its head in the sand- even if it doesn’t have the financial resources to provide additional funding.

Read More : University of South Wales faces huge deficit

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Latest research from Universities Wales, the representative body for Welsh universities, and carried out by London Economics, shows that the annual impact of Welsh universities on the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ economy from teaching, research, and innovation activities, is estimated at just under £11bn per year.

Data from the Higher Education Statistics Agency for 2022-23 shows a total student population in Wales of 154,000 (including the Open University), of which 19,720 were postgraduate. The number of foreign students was nearly 29,000, of which, following Brexit, only around 10% were from the . The staff number was just under 11,000, with the largest employer at more than 3,300.