National And World News
Row over hike in university vice-chancellors' pay
National And World News
Row over hike in university vice-chancellors' pay
The Pay Packets of Britain’s university heads rocketed by as much as a fifth last year, just as institutions lobbied for a huge hike in student tuition fees, The Daily Telegraph can reveal.
More than 950 university staff, including all vice-chancellors, were paid more than the Prime Minister – an eight per cent increase on the year before.
One senior administrator at Oxford was given a salary of almost £600,000, thought to be the highest-paid university post in the country.
Last night, the disclosure prompted claims that universities were showing an “arrogant disregard” for public opinion.
It comes just weeks after ministers backed plans to triple the cap on student tuition fees from just over £3,000 to £9,000 a year, sparking riots in Westminster and prompting fears that some teenagers will be priced out of higher education.
The move also comes despite the biggest cuts to university budgets in a generation.
Higher education institutions have been hit harder than almost every other sector in the drive to cut public spending, with some £573m removed from budgets last March. Institutions have also been told to prepare for further reductions of £3billion by 2015.
Universities defended the rises, saying large pay packets were necessary to allow them to attract the best talent and compete with leading institutions overseas.
But Aaron Porter, president of the National Union of Students, said: “It is disgusting that at a time when vice-chancellors have been pushing for the opportunity to take more money from students they are rewarding themselves with even more inflated salaries.
“It is this kind of arrogant disregard that also sees bankers paying themselves and the Government should be doing more to prevent it.”
Sally Hunt, general secretary of the Universities and Colleges Union, added: “Staff and the general public are tired of the hypocrisy from vice-chancellors and their lack of self-awareness when it comes to pay is insulting.”
The Telegraph analysed recently-published finances for 87 universities.
It emerged that three-quarters of university heads saw pay packages, including salary, pensions and other benefits, increase during the year to August 2010.
Eleven vice-chancellors saw their total pay rise by more than 10 per cent, including the heads of Oxford, Birmingham and Plymouth.
Executive salaries did fall at a handful of institutions, however, including University College London, whose vice-chancellor, Malcolm Grant, took a 10 per cent cut.
The increased pay packets come despite the Government’s call last May for vice-chancellors to apply “restraint to all aspects of pay and bonuses”.
Vince Cable, the Business Secretary, told The Daily Telegraph at the time that university leaders needed to show “realism and self-sacrifice” and that their pay bore “no relation to the underlying economics of the country”.
Yet the average pay packet was £254,000, more than five times the average academic salary of almost £47,000.
David Eastwood, the Birmingham vice-chancellor, was paid £392,000 last year, including pension contributions – a rise of 11 per cent on the combined pay of Prof Eastwood and his predecessor the year before.
Last year, the academic sat on an expert panel, alongside Lord Browne, the former BP boss, that recommended a sharp increase in tuition fees.
Of those universities publishing accounts so far, his pay package was larger than any other vice-chancellor.
The university said Prof Eastwood was the head of a “complex and successful organisation” contributing more than £780m to the local region, adding: “His remuneration needs to match his challenging and wide-ranging responsibilities and reflect the social and economic contribution that the university makes locally, nationally and internationally."
Figures show Andrew Hamilton, Oxford’s vice-chancellor, enjoys an annual package worth £382,000 in salary, pensions and other benefits – a 17 per cent rise on his predecessor. He was paid a slightly lower figure last year as he joined two months into the financial year.
The university is budgeting for teaching cuts of £45m a year for the foreseeable future and faces “significant” financial challenges, according to finances published last week.
It said that Prof Hamilton’s pay package was justified because the university topped the league tables last year.
A spokesman for the university said: "Oxford is one of the great universities of the world and makes a major contribution to the economic prosperity of the UK and the UK’s position in the world, as well as to tackling global challenges through its research.
“It must remain globally competitive and its vice-chancellor’s remuneration needs to reflect that.
“It is not, however, the highest vice-chancellor remuneration in the UK, despite the fact that according to every national league table in 2010, Oxford was the number one university in the country.”
Oxford also employs the country’s highest-paid university administrator.
Sandra Robertson, its endowment manager, was paid £580,000 to £590,000 last year. A spokeswoman pointed out that she is paid by a wholly-owned subsidiary company not directly by the university and that the returns on the fund she invests easily cover her salary.
The biggest salary increase was at Plymouth, which had to cut 220 staff in autumn 2008 in a bid to reduce overspending.
Its vice-chancellor, Wendy Purcell, was awarded a 20 per cent raise less than a year later, and is now paid £283,000.
The university said that Prof Purcell’s salary rose because it performed well financially and developed both its teaching and research activities.
Patricia Broadfoot, who took early retirement as vice-chancellor of Gloucestershire University last year, was given a £265,000 payoff on top of her £229,000 overall remuneration.
A spokeswoman said only that these payments were “in accordance with her contractual rights”.
The top five vice-chancellors’ raises
1. Wendy Purcell, Plymouth – 20% (£283,504)
2. Chris Jenks, Brunel – 18% (£280,000)
3. Andrew Hamilton, Oxford – 17% (£382,000)
4. Shirley Pearce, Loughborough – 15% (£275,365)
5. Noel Lloyd, Aberystwyth – 13% (£208,000)
More than 950 university staff, including all vice-chancellors, were paid more than the Prime Minister – an eight per cent increase on the year before.
One senior administrator at Oxford was given a salary of almost £600,000, thought to be the highest-paid university post in the country.
Last night, the disclosure prompted claims that universities were showing an “arrogant disregard” for public opinion.
It comes just weeks after ministers backed plans to triple the cap on student tuition fees from just over £3,000 to £9,000 a year, sparking riots in Westminster and prompting fears that some teenagers will be priced out of higher education.
The move also comes despite the biggest cuts to university budgets in a generation.
Higher education institutions have been hit harder than almost every other sector in the drive to cut public spending, with some £573m removed from budgets last March. Institutions have also been told to prepare for further reductions of £3billion by 2015.
Universities defended the rises, saying large pay packets were necessary to allow them to attract the best talent and compete with leading institutions overseas.
But Aaron Porter, president of the National Union of Students, said: “It is disgusting that at a time when vice-chancellors have been pushing for the opportunity to take more money from students they are rewarding themselves with even more inflated salaries.
“It is this kind of arrogant disregard that also sees bankers paying themselves and the Government should be doing more to prevent it.”
Sally Hunt, general secretary of the Universities and Colleges Union, added: “Staff and the general public are tired of the hypocrisy from vice-chancellors and their lack of self-awareness when it comes to pay is insulting.”
The Telegraph analysed recently-published finances for 87 universities.
It emerged that three-quarters of university heads saw pay packages, including salary, pensions and other benefits, increase during the year to August 2010.
Eleven vice-chancellors saw their total pay rise by more than 10 per cent, including the heads of Oxford, Birmingham and Plymouth.
Executive salaries did fall at a handful of institutions, however, including University College London, whose vice-chancellor, Malcolm Grant, took a 10 per cent cut.
The increased pay packets come despite the Government’s call last May for vice-chancellors to apply “restraint to all aspects of pay and bonuses”.
Vince Cable, the Business Secretary, told The Daily Telegraph at the time that university leaders needed to show “realism and self-sacrifice” and that their pay bore “no relation to the underlying economics of the country”.
Yet the average pay packet was £254,000, more than five times the average academic salary of almost £47,000.
David Eastwood, the Birmingham vice-chancellor, was paid £392,000 last year, including pension contributions – a rise of 11 per cent on the combined pay of Prof Eastwood and his predecessor the year before.
Last year, the academic sat on an expert panel, alongside Lord Browne, the former BP boss, that recommended a sharp increase in tuition fees.
Of those universities publishing accounts so far, his pay package was larger than any other vice-chancellor.
The university said Prof Eastwood was the head of a “complex and successful organisation” contributing more than £780m to the local region, adding: “His remuneration needs to match his challenging and wide-ranging responsibilities and reflect the social and economic contribution that the university makes locally, nationally and internationally."
Figures show Andrew Hamilton, Oxford’s vice-chancellor, enjoys an annual package worth £382,000 in salary, pensions and other benefits – a 17 per cent rise on his predecessor. He was paid a slightly lower figure last year as he joined two months into the financial year.
The university is budgeting for teaching cuts of £45m a year for the foreseeable future and faces “significant” financial challenges, according to finances published last week.
It said that Prof Hamilton’s pay package was justified because the university topped the league tables last year.
A spokesman for the university said: "Oxford is one of the great universities of the world and makes a major contribution to the economic prosperity of the UK and the UK’s position in the world, as well as to tackling global challenges through its research.
“It must remain globally competitive and its vice-chancellor’s remuneration needs to reflect that.
“It is not, however, the highest vice-chancellor remuneration in the UK, despite the fact that according to every national league table in 2010, Oxford was the number one university in the country.”
Oxford also employs the country’s highest-paid university administrator.
Sandra Robertson, its endowment manager, was paid £580,000 to £590,000 last year. A spokeswoman pointed out that she is paid by a wholly-owned subsidiary company not directly by the university and that the returns on the fund she invests easily cover her salary.
The biggest salary increase was at Plymouth, which had to cut 220 staff in autumn 2008 in a bid to reduce overspending.
Its vice-chancellor, Wendy Purcell, was awarded a 20 per cent raise less than a year later, and is now paid £283,000.
The university said that Prof Purcell’s salary rose because it performed well financially and developed both its teaching and research activities.
Patricia Broadfoot, who took early retirement as vice-chancellor of Gloucestershire University last year, was given a £265,000 payoff on top of her £229,000 overall remuneration.
A spokeswoman said only that these payments were “in accordance with her contractual rights”.
The top five vice-chancellors’ raises
1. Wendy Purcell, Plymouth – 20% (£283,504)
2. Chris Jenks, Brunel – 18% (£280,000)
3. Andrew Hamilton, Oxford – 17% (£382,000)
4. Shirley Pearce, Loughborough – 15% (£275,365)
5. Noel Lloyd, Aberystwyth – 13% (£208,000)
Related : Row over hike in university vice-chancellors' pay By Tom Rowley and Graeme Paton, National And World News
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