
The Socialist 6 May 2020
Bosses push to lift lockdown - they only care about profits

Bosses push to lift lockdown - they only care about profits
Bail out the real wealth creators, not the rich
Homes needed to end overcrowding
Homeless left on streets during pandemic
Pay full fees for virtual courses? - No way!
Your donations can keep the Socialist going
Test and trace: workers need a real plan
Tories using pandemic to shift lab testing out of NHS
Nationalise British Airways to stop 12,000 redundancies
Postal workers force Royal Mail back
No increase in transport capacity without adequate safety precautions for workers and passengers
Unsafe Workplace? "It's up to you" PCS tells reps and members
Further protests in Ireland against Debenhams closures - UK fightback needed
Rolls Royce threatens 8,000 job losses
EDF Energy workers furloughed on 100% pay
India: Fighting the curse of capitalism and coronavirus
US: Trump's public health cuts have condemned thousands worldwide
Trump puts profit before safety (again)
The Tyneside apprentices' strike during WW2
Going viral: Socialist comments and letters on the corona crisis
TV Review BBC Panorama: PPE shortage - how many lives will be lost?
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Coronavirus
Universities' £2.5 billion funding 'black hole'
Pay full fees for virtual courses? - No way!
Bea Gardner, Southampton University and College Union (personal capacity)
The higher education sector faces a massive £2.5 billion funding 'black hole' which could see thousands of job losses if the government does not step in.
A recent report by London Economics, for the University and College Union (UCU), warned that 111,000 fewer UK and 121,000 fewer international first-year students will attend courses in September, resulting in billions of lost tuition fees income.
The report estimates 30,000 university jobs at risk, with a further 32,000 jobs under threat throughout the supply chain.
Not included in the report was the current losses for the sector from activities like summer conferences and accommodation. The Office for Budget Responsibility has predicted a 90% reduction in education output this quarter alone; a greater loss than any other sector.
Yet, despite mounting pressure to provide financial help, the treasury has this week confirmed it will not give any new money to the sector. Instead, the government has announced it will allow universities to continue to charge full tuition fees, even if the campuses remain closed and teaching is delivered online.
In reality, this means passing the cost of the crisis on to students who already pay extortionate fees which saddle them with a lifetime of debt.
The announcement means students starting in September could be paying £9,250 a year for remote courses, thrown together in a matter of weeks, without the physical resources like library books.
The quality of education has already been eroded by more than a decade of marketisation, slashing quality and workers' conditions, to increase profits. Now, students are expected to continue to pay outrageous fees for even further reduced quality of education.
In comparison, the Open University, which delivers all its degree courses online, recently announced it spent two years developing a new online course.
The likelihood is this announcement will push more students to defer their place until it is safe for them to physically attend, causing an even greater financial impact for universities.
The universities are playing a leading role in Covid-19 research. If universities were nationalised and run as a public service, not a business, then a fluctuation in student numbers would not be an issue. If democratically run by staff and students, universities could focus on excellent research, teaching and collaboration rather than competition and vanity projects.
But even if the government continues to refuse financial help, the universities have reserves and other assets they could use. Some universities have announced they will continue with expensive new buildings while slashing staff numbers.
The UCU must now mount a determined and co-ordinated campaign, including strike action if necessary, to protect jobs.
Meanwhile, students should not pay the cost of the higher education crisis. They should join with UCU activists and Socialist Students to campaign for universities to be run democratically by staff and students under public ownership.
- Socialist Students demands that students and staff are not made to pay for this crisis. Students need organisations of their own which fight for the immediate scrapping of tuition fees, the cancellation of student debt, and to end the capitalist driven marketisation of higher education which has led universities to the brink of collapse. If you're a student, join Socialist Students today.
In this issue
What we think
Bosses push to lift lockdown - they only care about profits
Coronavirus news
Bail out the real wealth creators, not the rich
Homes needed to end overcrowding
Homeless left on streets during pandemic
Pay full fees for virtual courses? - No way!
Your donations can keep the Socialist going
Test and trace
Test and trace: workers need a real plan
Tories using pandemic to shift lab testing out of NHS
Workplace news
Nationalise British Airways to stop 12,000 redundancies
Postal workers force Royal Mail back
No increase in transport capacity without adequate safety precautions for workers and passengers
Unsafe Workplace? "It's up to you" PCS tells reps and members
Further protests in Ireland against Debenhams closures - UK fightback needed
Rolls Royce threatens 8,000 job losses
EDF Energy workers furloughed on 100% pay
International news
India: Fighting the curse of capitalism and coronavirus
US: Trump's public health cuts have condemned thousands worldwide
Trump puts profit before safety (again)
Lessons from history
The Tyneside apprentices' strike during WW2
Obituary
Readers' opinion
Going viral: Socialist comments and letters on the corona crisis
TV Review BBC Panorama: PPE shortage - how many lives will be lost?
Related links:
University workers ballot for action against in-person teaching
Students speak out: isolation and uncertainty reign
"It's not fair" - lockdown students demand free education
Reject the university employers' offer on pay, workload and casualisation
Students and workers out together on Budget Day, 11 March
Scrap fees, refund rents and pay a living grant
Socialist Students national meeting: Refund the rent, cancel the fees and fight for free education
Refund student rent and fees - fight for free education and make the 1% pay
Steel site scaffolders strike for the 'rate of the job'
Morrisons - £10/hr headline hides divisive pay offer
University teaching moves online in England
Refund the rent, cancel the fees, for fully funded, publicly owned education
Plymouth rent strike continues
Exams scrapped again - young people need a future with jobs and free education
'Cut the Rent!' campaign kicks off