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University budgets Losers and winners

HIGHER EDUCATION FUNDING HIGHER EDUCATION FUNDING GRANT STUDENT NUMBERS WHAT’S HAPPENING? University % change in
2010-11 GRANT TABLES FOR ENGLAND £BN THOUSANDS cash terms*
University % change in Teaching Research Other (including capital) Projection Gloucestershire -0.1
cash terms* 400 St Mary's -0.1
London Business School -11.9 1998/99 East Anglia -0.1
Courtauld Institute of Art -10.9 1999/00 University of -0.1
Institute of Cancer Research -10.3 Sheffield -0.1
2000/01 380
Reading -7.7 Bournemouth 0.1
Heythrop -6.8 2001/02 The Arts at Bournemouth 0.1
LSE -6.3 2002/03 Cambridge 0.1
University of the Arts London -4.7 360 Liverpool 0.2
Cranfield -3.8 2003/04 Northumbria at Newcastle 0.2
Royal College of Art -3.5 2004/05 York St John 0.3
Norwich College of the Arts -2.9 Plymouth 0.4
Salford -2.1
2005/06 340 Warwick 0.6
Surrey -2.1 2006/07 De Montfort 0.6
College Birmingham -1.8 2007/08 School of Pharmacy 0.6
Keele -1.8 Oxford Brookes 0.6
Goldsmiths College -1.7 2008/09 320 St George's Hospital Medical School 0.7
Royal Agricultural College -1.7 2009/10 Durham 0.7
Bishop Grosseteste Lincoln -1.6 Brighton 0.7
Bath Spa -1.5 2010/11 Chester 0.8
300
Liverpool Institute for Performing Arts -1.5 0 2 4 6 8 2001/02 2002/03 2004/05 2006/07 2008/09 2010/11 Thames Valley 0.8
Institute of Education -1.5 Royal Northern College of Music 0.8
Buckinghamshire -1.4 Leeds Metropolitan 0.9
Writtle College -1.2 Middlesex 0.9
Birmingham -1.2
BIGGEST LOSER LONDON BUSINESS SCHOOL BIGGEST WINNER UNIVERSITY OF WORCESTER Oxford 1.0
Bedfordshire -1.1 Sheffield Hallam 1.0
Newcastle upon Tyne -1.0 The West of England, Bristol 1.1
Bolton -0.9 Essex 1.1
City -0.9 Royal Veterinary College 1.1
Royal Holloway -0.9 Loughborough 1.2
Sunderland -0.8 Leicester 1.3
Imperial -0.7 Kent 1.5
School of Oriental and African Studies -0.7 Winchester 1.6
Brunel -0.7 Lincoln 1.7
Nottingham Trent -0.7 University College London 1.7
Birkbeck -0.7 Hull 2.0
Westminster -0.7 Open 2.0
Bath -0.7 Liverpool Hope 2.1
Liverpool John Moores -0.6 Greenwich 2.2
London Metropolitan -0.6 Hertfordshire 2.2
Roehampton -0.6 Derby 2.2
Bradford -0.6 Leeds College of Music 2.3
Cumbria -0.6 Nottingham 2.4
Portsmouth -0.6 Central Lancashire 2.5
Sussex -0.6 Teesside 2.5
Birmingham City -0.6 York 2.5
King's College -0.5 Edge Hill 2.6
Leeds -0.5 Northampton 2.6
Manchester Metropolitan -0.5 Plymouth St Mark & St John 2.7
London South Bank -0.5 Leeds Trinity 2.9
Bristol -0.5 Staffordshire 3.2
Aston -0.5 Falmouth 3.5
Royal College of Music -0.4 Exeter 3.7
East London -0.4 Anglia Ruskin 4.3
Southampton -0.4 Guildhall School of Music & Drama 4.3
Rose Bruford -0.3 The biggest loser is the London Business School (part of The biggest winner in today’s budget is the University of Newman 4.5
Trinity Laban -0.3 the University of London) which sees its grant cut by 11.9 Worcester with a 13.3 per cent rise in its allocation. Coventry 4.5
Lancaster -0.3 per cent. That is simply because it does not recruit in the Formerly a college of higher education, it was only East Anglia and Essex 4.6
University for the Creative Arts -0.3 Chichester 5.0
Royal Academy of Music -0.2 Government’s key priority areas of science, maths, granted university status five years ago – and since then School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine 5.3
Central School of Speech and Drama -0.2 engineering and technology. However, it does not rely on has seen applications soar by 100 per cent. As a result, it is Southampton Solent 6.3
Conservatoire for Dance and Drama -0.2 government funding and is an international business school one of the few in the country allowed to expand again this London 6.3
Huddersfield -0.2 with a worldwide reputation. Its vice-chancellor earned autumn when it will be taking in a further 1,500 extra Ravensbourne College 7.1
Wolverhampton -0.2 £474,000 last year, too. students. Canterbury Christ Church 8.3
Kingston -0.2 Harper Adams 10.0
Queen Mary, London -0.2 Source: HEFCE *figures fail to take in two per cent inflation Worcester 13.3

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