A Decade of Expansion Followed by Contraction
The UK higher education sector has undergone significant transformation in academic staffing over the past decade. According to Higher Education Statistics Agency (HESA) data, the total number of academic staff grew by 23 percent from approximately 200,000 in 2014/15 to 245,020 in 2024/25. This expansion was not uniform; teaching-only roles, which focus exclusively on delivering lectures, seminars, and tutorials without research responsibilities, surged by 64 percent from 52,000 to 85,000 positions, rising from 26 percent to 35 percent of all academic contracts. In contrast, teaching and research (T&R) roles—traditional positions balancing both duties—shrank from 49 percent to 43 percent of the workforce.
However, 2024/25 marked a turning point: for the first time since records began, academic headcount fell by 1 percent to 244,755, with more staff leaving (43,050) than joining (40,755). Teaching-only contracts bore the brunt, declining 4 percent or 3,555 jobs, while research-only roles grew slightly by 4 percent. This reversal highlights vulnerabilities in the sector's staffing model amid financial strains.
Financial Pressures Driving the Cuts
UK universities face a 'perfect storm': tuition fees frozen since 2017, a post-Brexit and visa policy drop in international students (down 10-15 percent in some cases), soaring pension contributions (Teachers' Pension Scheme employer rate at 28.68 percent), energy costs, and lingering COVID effects. Over 90 institutions announced 13,300 redundancies in 2024/25, costing £303 million in severance—up 71 percent—with Russell Group unis accounting for 41 percent (£124.7 million).
To protect research for the 2029 Research Excellence Framework (REF), institutions prioritize T&R staff, slashing teaching-only and fixed-term positions first. Fixed-term contracts fell 3 percent to 69,875 (lowest since 2015/16), zero-hours down 16 percent to 3,440. UCU reports over 15,000 job losses announced in 2025 alone.
Case Studies: Universities in the Spotlight
Sheffield Hallam University exemplifies the trend, planning to shift teaching-only staff to a subsidiary, denying them Teachers' Pension Scheme access (replacing with cheaper Local Government Pension Scheme at 17.6 percent contribution), saving £6 million amid £26.6 million cuts for 2026/27. REF-eligible research staff retain TPS, creating tiers; UCU calls it an 'assault', balloting for strikes. Read more on Sheffield Hallam changes.
Other examples: Queen Mary University of London eyes 130 academic redundancies (14 percent cut), targeting teaching; University of Essex 400 jobs; Nottingham 500; Edinburgh 1,800 (350 voluntary); Goldsmiths 22 percent cut; Winchester nearly a third to 520 academics. Post-92s like Robert Gordon (20 percent cut) and Derby (senior academics halved) hit hard.
The Two-Tier Divide: Precarious vs Secure
Teaching-only roles are 70 percent part-time, 53 percent fixed-term (vs 6 percent for T&R), lower-paid (56 percent of non-T&R in lower bands), with limited progression. Subsidiaries exacerbate this, fragmenting rights. UCU Feb 2025 update (HESA 2022/23): teaching-only fixed-term 37 percent (down from 45 percent), but hourly-paid 37 percent, women/Black staff overrepresented in precariousness.
Gender disparity: women 57 percent part-time academics, 55 percent teaching-only, though gaining senior roles (32 percent professors). Risks: low morale, burnout, high turnover (teaching-only expand in booms, cut in busts).
Impacts on Teaching Quality and Students
Declining teaching staff strains workloads: larger classes, less support. Students suffer from inexperienced hourly-paid tutors (37 percent teaching-only). Research silos hinder integrated education; precarious staff less innovative. Long-term: talent drain, as teaching-only blocks research careers.
- Increased student:staff ratios.
- Reduced pastoral care.
- Lower satisfaction scores.
Stakeholder Perspectives and Union Response
Cornelia Lawson (Manchester): cuts from student drops, non-renewed fixed-terms; research protected for REF. Ernestine Gheyoh Ndzi (York St John): consolidation raises workloads, stratifies labor.
UCU demands: end casualisation, continuity of employment, fair pay (RPI+3% or £3k), no subsidiaries. Strikes balloted; voluntary severance preferred (e.g. Plymouth 91, Cardiff success). UCU precarious work report.
Gender and Diversity Dimensions
Women dominate teaching-only (55 percent), precarious contracts (higher fixed-term/zero-hours rates). Ethnic minorities similarly overrepresented. This perpetuates gaps: women 46 percent full-time below £52k vs 38 percent men.
Future Outlook: What Lies Ahead?
2026 fee uplift may ease, but levy, visa issues persist. REF 2029 protects research; teaching vulnerable. Projections: continued cuts unless government acts on funding/visas. Hybrid roles may emerge.
Pathways Forward and Actionable Solutions
Solutions: policy for permanent contracts post-probation, pension equity, research access for teachers. Unis: diversify income, upskill staff. Individuals: hybrid skills (pedagogy+research), networks.
- UCU: Stamp Out Casualisation campaign.
- Govt: sustainable funding.
- Academics: explore lecturer jobs emphasizing versatility.
For job seekers, platforms like AcademicJobs offer teaching-focused roles amid flux. HESA staff data.








