The Conservative Party, led by Kemi Badenoch, has reignited debate over higher education funding in the UK with bold proposals to defund what they term 'low-value' or 'dead-end' university degrees. These are courses characterized by high dropout rates, low progression to skilled employment, and subpar graduate earnings. The policy aims to redirect savings—estimated at £3 billion annually—towards doubling the apprenticeships budget to £6 billion, creating 100,000 additional places each year.
This move addresses longstanding concerns about the value of certain degrees amid rising graduate debt and taxpayer subsidies. With over 700,000 graduates claiming benefits in 2024 despite holding degrees, the Tories argue for a shift towards vocational training that better aligns with job market needs.
What Defines a 'Low-Value' Degree? 🔍
The Office for Students (OfS) uses specific metrics to identify underperforming courses, including completion rates below 75%, progression to highly skilled work or further study under 60%, and median earnings in the bottom quartile (£24,800 five years post-graduation).
LEO (Longitudinal Education Outcomes) data from 2022-23 reveals stark disparities. Median earnings five years after graduation average £31,400, but low earners include:
- Creative arts and design: £20,800
- Art: £22,600
- Personal development: £23,000
- Dance: £23,700
- Childhood studies: £23,700
Contrast this with medicine (£55,000+) or computer science (£40,000+).
Graduate Outcomes: The Harsh Reality
While 87.6% of working-age graduates are employed (vs 68% non-grads), quality matters. Only 61% of 2022/23 leavers are in full-time graduate jobs, with many in non-degree roles.
LEO tracks earnings: bottom 25% earn less than Level 4/5 qualifiers (£37,300 after 5 years). Arts/humanities grads often cluster here, with philosophy at £22k median.
This data fuels calls for reform, highlighting mismatch between supply and demand.
Examples of Degrees in the Crosshairs
Performing arts tops low earners (£20k-23k), with dropout rates 12-18% at institutions like University for the Creative Arts (18.1%).
While not all are doomed—top unis excel—providers with persistent poor metrics face caps. OfS B3 data flags subjects below benchmarks: <75% completion, <60% good outcomes.
Supporters note these degrees enrich culture but question mass expansion at public cost.
OfS Student Outcomes DashboardThe Conservative Rationale: Value for Money
Tories argue current system subsidizes failure: £1.3bn annual write-offs on non-repaying loans.
Manifesto echoes: curb low-quality to fund alternatives.
University and Student Backlash
Unis decry simplistic metrics ignoring social mobility, regional variation. UUK: "Outcomes data resilient, but value beyond pay."
Arts unis fear cuts; Badenoch targets English, anthropology as examples.
Economic and Social Impacts
Capping could shrink HE by 100k students/year, hitting post-92 unis hardest. Taxpayer savings, but unis face revenue loss amid £2.5bn deficit.
Boosts apprenticeships in green tech, digital—key growth areas. Risks: reduced diversity, innovation from arts/humanities.
Explore higher ed career advice for navigating outcomes.Case Studies: Success and Failure
Success: Computer science grads 95% employed, £40k earnings. Failure: Performing arts at low-tariff unis: 18% dropout, 50% non-grad jobs.
Regional: London grads outperform North due to opportunities.
Apprenticeships as Alternative
Degree apprenticeships yield £26k start salary, 90% retention. Tories double funding for level 4-7, targeting underserved groups.
International Comparisons and Lessons
Australia caps low-value via funding; Germany apprenticeships model. UK could hybridize.
Photo by BEN ELLIOTT on Unsplash
Future Outlook and Solutions
If enacted post-election, expect OfS enforcement 2026/27. Solutions: unis upskill courses, modular LLE (Lifelong Learning Entitlement).
Balanced reform: enhance outcomes without stifling choice. Check Rate My Professor for course insights, explore higher ed jobs and career advice.