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PRIVACY
Opinion

The time for polite lobbying is over and we need a bold plan for Welsh universities

The Senedd manifesto from Universities Wales has merit but by asking government for more money without offering structural reform repeats a cycle that has persisted for over a decade.

I still believe Welsh universities could play a transformative role in the nation’s future. (Image: PA Archive/PA Images)

This week the body representing Welsh universities, and whose members are vice-chancellors, published its manifesto for the 2026 Senedd.

As would be expected, Universities for a Stronger Wales, is thoughtful and ambitious document that sets out how universities contribute to the nation’s economy, culture and communities, and calls for a new partnership with government built on investment, trust and shared purpose.

Yet, read against the reality of what has happened to Welsh higher education in recent years, it feels more like a diplomatic plea for survival than a blueprint for renewal and crucially, avoids the hard questions that now define the crisis facing the sector.

Over the past eighteen months, I’ve written extensively about the challenges that have engulfed Welsh universities and the evidence remains stark. Tuition fee freezes have squeezed finances, the rush to recruit international students has created a dangerous dependency and poor governance have left some institutions in serious difficulties.

Worst of all, the Welsh Government, despite being responsible for the higher education sector since 1999, has largely looked the other way whilst the sector lurches from crisis to crisis.

The new manifesto acknowledges the symptoms but not the causes and whilst it speaks of “sustainability,” “skills,” and “research excellence,” it does not admit that parts of the system have been run into the ground by short-term decisions, complacency, and a failure of strategic leadership.

The manifesto calls for a funding review, which is welcome, but it cannot be another technical exercise in cost accounting. What is needed is an honest national conversation about what kind of higher education system Wales actually needs namely how many institutions, what missions they serve, and whether they are fit for purpose in an economy that desperately needs skills, innovation, and local engagement.

Equally absent is any serious reflection on the role universities should play in the wider innovation economy. While the manifesto rightly celebrates research and calls for more research and innovation funding, it overlooks a deeper truth namely that Wales has fallen behind because our research rarely translates into business growth.