The politics of government intervention in the HE market: Andrew McGettigan talks to Kirsten Forkert

IF 1.1 4区 社会学 0 HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
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Abstract

The last twenty to thirty years have seen a big push to create a market in higher education, but there have been frequent interventions by governments both to sustain the 'market' and to alter its operation for policy reasons. The sector has massively expanded since the 1990s because of a cross-party consensus that the country needed more skills - though this view is now less popular; however, there still seems to be consensus that higher education should be substantially funded by (capped) domestic student fees (the price of a degree for international students is largely unregulated). A big subprime market has developed in Higher Education; and there has also been an increase in third-party private providers: much recent regulation is necessitated by adapting the system to these providers. The market is frequently set aside when it comes up against the establishment privilege of Oxbridge and the Russell Group. And tweaks to the market made since 2010 have largely been designed to steer more resources to already privileged institutions. For example the recent announcements about capping foundation year fees, and limiting dependant visas for international students, will have a greater adverse effect on non-elite institutions because of the kind of recruitment they're involved in, and the kind of offer they make to students. The same logic applies to removing the cap on recruitment to elite universities, and the reduction of funding for Foundation Years. The 2023 announcement that the government wished the regulator, OfS, to make more use of its powers to restrict funding for 'low-value' courses was accompanied by culture wars rhetoric, but should be understood as an attempt to limit university autonomy, even while it also addresses concerns around the 'new providers' that have been allowed to access government-backed loans since 2010.
政府干预高等教育市场的政治:安德鲁·麦克格蒂根与克尔斯滕·福克特对话
在过去的二三十年里,人们大力推动高等教育市场的建立,但政府经常干预,以维持“市场”,并出于政策原因改变其运作。自上世纪90年代以来,该行业已大规模扩张,因为两党达成共识,认为该国需要更多的技能——尽管这种观点现在不那么受欢迎了;然而,人们似乎仍然一致认为,高等教育应该主要由(有上限的)国内学生学费资助(国际学生学位的价格在很大程度上是不受监管的)。高等教育已经形成了一个巨大的次贷市场;第三方私人供应商也在增加:最近的许多监管都是为了使系统适应这些供应商。在面对牛桥和罗素集团的特权时,市场常常被搁置一边。自2010年以来对市场进行的调整主要是为了将更多资源引向已经享有特权的机构。例如,最近关于限制预科学费和限制国际学生家属签证的公告,将对非精英院校产生更大的不利影响,因为它们参与的招聘方式,以及它们向学生提供的录取条件。同样的逻辑也适用于取消精英大学的招生上限,以及减少预科课程的资助。2023年,政府宣布希望监管机构OfS更多地利用其权力来限制对“低价值”课程的资助,这伴随着文化战争的言论,但应该被理解为限制大学自主权的尝试,尽管它也解决了对“新提供者”的担忧,这些提供者自2010年以来被允许获得政府支持的贷款。
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来源期刊
SOUNDINGS
SOUNDINGS HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY-
CiteScore
0.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
5
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