2018–2023 United Kingdom higher education strikes
The University and College Union (UCU), a trade union representing 110,000 staff at UK universities,[1] ran a major series of connected strikes in 2018, 2019, and 2020. The action has been characterised as "something of a milestone" for "impending service sector strikes of the 21st century".
In 2018, the dispute concerned proposed changes to the Universities Superannuation Scheme (USS).[2] In 2019–20, strike action on USS continued, and action on a parallel dispute over pay equality, workload, casualisation, and pay levels was added.[3]
The first strike began in February 2018. This strike escalated over fourteen strike days between 22 February and 20 March, and took place at sixty-four universities across the UK, represented by Universities UK (UUK).[2][4] This was the longest ever strike in UK higher-education history.[5][6] The Office for National Statistics found that in 2018, 66% of all working days lost to strike action were accounted for by the education sector, "due mainly to disputes involving employees of universities".[7] An estimated 42,000 staff[6] went on strike with 575,000 teaching hours being lost.[8] By 28 March, over 700 external examiners had also recorded their resignations in a UCU document.[9]
As of 28 March 2018, more than a million students were estimated to have been affected,[8] with 126,000 students signing petitions calling for fee refunds.[10] Students also occupied campus buildings in support of striking staff at more than a dozen universities.[2][11][12]
From 25 November to 4 December 2019, and on fourteen days between 20 February and 13 March 2020, UCU undertook further strikes, partly in a continuation of the pensions dispute which triggered the strikes in 2018, and partly in a parallel dispute over pay equality, workload, casualisation, and pay levels. In this second dispute, universities were represented by the Universities and Colleges Employers Association (UCEA).[3]
During the period covered by this article, strikes also took place on local disputes at individual universities, covered in the table of all strike action below.
Background to the strikes
The United Kingdom has 130 universities.[4] Staff at 68 universities founded before 1992 are members of the USS pension scheme.[4] (Most academic staff at institutions which became universities after 1992 are members of the Teachers' Pension Scheme, which is unaffected by this dispute.)[4] In January 2018, UCU members at 61 universities (initially) balloted in favour of action over the proposed pension changes.[13]
As reporting, both in the UK and abroad, noted, the strikes took place in the context of other tensions over higher education and pension provision in the UK, as follows.[14][15][16][17][18]
National UK higher education policy
- Debates about tuition fee levels and the mechanisms for paying them. In particular, on 19 February 2018, the UK Prime Minister Theresa May had announced an official review of UK higher education funding.[19]
- The increasingly corporate and privatised character of higher education institutions. For example, universities, whose capital expenditure had traditionally been funded to a significant extent by government funding, were increasingly borrowing from private capital markets, making them concerned about their credit ratings, and with uncertain consequences for their finances and governance.[12][20][21]
- The creation of the Office for Students on 1 January 2018, whose powers came into force 1 April 2018. For example, on 28 February 2018, the OFS said that "universities that fail to mitigate the impact of the strikes would open themselves up to regulatory intervention".[22]
Pensions
The USS pension scheme
The USS scheme was created in 1974 to provide sector-wide pensions for UK university staff (focusing on academic staff).[23] Its terms changed little until 2011, when major reforms were implemented, followed by further changes in 2014–15.[24][25][26] These changes left scheme members markedly worse off: one academic study concluded that the reduced wealth of post-2011 entrants was equivalent to an 11% drop in their total compensation or a 13% drop in their salaries.[27]: 25
By 2017, the USS scheme had over 400,000 members.[28]
Wider UK pensions
- The UK Pensions Act 2004 had placed stringent requirements on private-sector pensions to ensure that their liabilities could be met even if all their member organisations collapsed at once—which in the context of USS would entail the whole University system going bust, an event deemed unlikely by many. Over 2006–17, the proportion of UK private-sector defined-benefit schemes open to new joiners declined from 43% to 14%.[29] In the analysis of Mervyn King and John Kay, 'The 2004 Pensions Act is a prime, but by no means unique, example of well-intentioned but inept financial regulation. Over-prescriptive, it has led to the demise of the defined benefit schemes that it was designed to protect. If proposed changes to the USS are implemented, there will be no defined benefit schemes of any significant size outside the public sector open to new members'.[30]
- Similar or even more dramatic proposed pension cuts for universities' non-academic staff.[31] For example, in January 2018, Southampton University began consultations on closing its defined-benefits pension scheme for non-academic staff,[32] and in March 2018, Staffordshire University began consultations on moving support staff from the defined-benefit local government scheme to a local defined-contribution scheme.[33]
- Worsening outlooks for pension provision across the UK, in the context of rising remuneration for fund managers and increasing integration of pension funds into speculative financial markets.[34] For example, it was noted that pay for USS's chief executive rose from £484,000 in 2017 to £566,000 in 2018, while two staff members earned over £1m, and running costs stood at £125m per annum.[35]
Pay and conditions
- Public concern about rapidly rising pay for University senior management, particularly Vice-chancellors.[36][37] In particular, on 26 February 2018, the Channel 4 investigative journalism programme Dispatches broadcast an exposé of vice-chancellors' expenses claims.[38]
- Concern among university staff about falling real-terms pay for most staff.[36] Moreover, the pay projections assumed in USS's 2017 valuation and used to argue for reducing pensions assumed an increase in general pay growth: rather than assuming pay would keep up with inflation (as measured by the consumer price index), USS assumed pay growth one percent above inflation (as measured, more generously, by the retail price index).[39] On 16 April 2018, staff were actually offered a payrise of 1.7%, below both CPI inflation (then 2.7%) and RPI (then 3.6%).[40]
- Growing numbers of academic staff were on precarious short-term or zero-hours contracts – in 2018–19, 34% of academic staff were employed on short-term contracts and 13% were paid by the hour.[41][42] In March, UCU argued on the basis of data from a freedom of information request that an average of 27% UK university teaching hours were delivered by such staff.[43] The issue of casualisation became increasingly prominent in UCU members' understanding of the strikes as they developed.[44]
- Similar concerns were reflected by strike action around the same time more widely in UK professional classes: junior doctors undertook their first strikes in the history of the National Health Service (England) in 2015–16, while barristers began strike action on 1 April 2018.[45]
2018 USS pension negotiations, and associated strike action
Prior to industrial action
In July 2017, USS reported a technical deficit (i.e. a gap between the fund's assets and its liabilities) of £17.5 billion, reported as the largest such shortfall in the UK at that time.[28] USS's deficit evaluation was based on suggestions that although the fund's assets had grown (reaching £60 billion, a one-fifth increase on the previous year), its liabilities had also grown (reaching £78 billion, a one-third increase over the previous year).[46] Following negotiations regarding the calculation of the deficit, the USS Joint Negotiating Committee accepted a technical deficit of £6.1 billion in November 2017.
The key change proposed by UUK was to close USS's defined benefit scheme (possibly temporarily), replacing it with a defined contribution scheme.[47]
Specifically, the USS Joint Negotiating Committee therefore made the following proposals, to be introduced after 1 April 2019:[48]
- Closing of the defined benefits section of the scheme (though mentioning the possibility of reintroducing it), with all future benefits (apart from death in service and ill health retirement benefits) being transferred to the defined contribution scheme.
- Contributions would remain 8% for members and 18% for employers (of which 13.25% contributes directly to pensions, the rest being used for management and running costs, etc.).
- Members would be enabled to pay only 4% while still receiving the usual employer contribution, while the option of paying an extra 1%, matched by the employer, would be removed.
- Members' 8% (or 4%) would include a contribution to partly finance death in service and ill health retirement benefits.
The closure of defined benefits was presented as a red line by UCU, which argued in favour of finding ways to sustain defined benefits, or to introduce a collective defined contribution scheme[47][49][50][2] (the primary legislation for which was introduced in the UK in 2015, but which had not as of March 2018 been advanced to secondary legislation).[51]
Arguments for the changes
USS argued that market conditions had simply proven less favourable than previous valuations had assumed, with the chief executive, Bill Galvin, arguing that 'the unavoidable fact is that market conditions have changed since 2014. Real interest rates have fallen since 2014, relative to inflation, and asset prices have soared ... We are now having to pay more – to get less in return – than we expected in the past'. Moreover, USS emphasised that its room for manoeuvre was constrained by the Pensions Regulator.[52]
In theory, the deficit could have been resolved through higher contribution rates. However, UUK argued that defined benefit schemes were becoming prohibitively expensive.[53] They said they had a legal duty to put in place a credible plan to reduce the deficit by the summer of 2018. Otherwise, pension contributions from employers and staff would have to sharply increase, potentially resulting in redundancies and cuts to other areas of teaching, research and student support.[4][54] UUK stated the defined contributions proposal would compare well with private-sector competitors, with employer contributions double the private sector average.[55]
USS had a legal responsibility to satisfy the UK pensions regulator that the scheme was sound, and the regulator was requiring change.[56]
Arguments against the changes
UCU stated that UUK's proposal would "leave a typical lecturer almost £10,000 a year worse off in retirement than under the current set-up",[57][58] with younger staff the worst affected, with some losing up to half their anticipated pensions.[4]
Critics of the changes offered the following main arguments against implementing the changes to the scheme promoted by UUK.
- UUK's assessment of the health of the higher education sector after a 2015/16 report by the Higher Education Funding Council for England (HEFCE) found the sector was financially sound.[53][59] Independent analyses undertaken by University of Warwick economist Dennis Leech and UCL academic Sean Wallis argued that UUK used a "flawed valuation model".[60]
- The proposed USS changes were shaped by the demand of the UK pensions regulator that USS should be made less risky to employers than USS's actuaries had wished. It was argued, however, that in view of the exceptional economic circumstances associated with the Bank of England's quantitative easing from 2009, the regulator was placing unrealistic expectations on UK pensions nationally.[56][30]
- Concern also grew, on the basis of research by Michael Otsuka from the London School of Economics, that UUK's negotiating position was disproportionately influenced by the views of Oxford and Cambridge Universities, whose constituent colleges made separate submissions to consultations.[61][62][50]
- Current employees were annually paying £2.1bn into the USS fund, while it was annually paying out £1.8bn to pensioners. To cover the current annual cost of pensions from investment returns, the fund required a net annual return of 3%.[63] One of the assumptions used in the July 2017 valuation was that the fund would stop accepting contributions – the sort of situation that would normally arise if the companies in a pension scheme went bust, which was an unlikely real-world situation for the UK higher education sector.[64] USS's analyses showed that, assuming the most likely circumstances rather than the most challenging circumstances (technically referred to as the "best estimate"), the pension scheme was sustainable in the long-term. In contrast to technical deficits based on stringently conservative assumptions, this more probable valuation showed the fund in credit by £8.3 billion.[64]
- At the inception of USS, employer contributions were 16% of salary, rising to 18.55% in 1983. However, from January 1997 to September 2009 they were decreased to 14% (before rising to 16% from October 2009 to 2016 and 18% thereafter). It was suggested that staff were bearing the consequences of an earlier lack of investment by employers.[23][65]
UCU ballots for industrial action (29 January 2018)
On 29 January, UCU announced that 88% of UCU members had voted to back strike action and 93% backed action short of a strike.[13] The turnout was 58%,[57] meeting the 50% minimum set by the Trade Union Act 2016.
Shortly after, on 13 February, the trade union UNISON, many of whose members in the Higher Education sector were also USS members, began a consultative ballot on striking alongside UCU.[66] On 20 February, UNISON wrote to vice-chancellors in support of UCU's position.[67]
Strike action commences (23 February 2018) and new negotiations follow
Strikes commenced on 23 February, whereupon UUK agreed to meet UCU for further negotiations on 27 February. Leaked emails suggested they would not negotiate on UCU's key issue, retaining defined benefits.[68] The meeting led to an agreement to undergo conciliation through Acas, the UK's national industrial dispute conciliation body. UCU tabled and published a set of proposals which it argued was consistent with the majority of UUK members' positions in USS's earlier consultation, but strikes were not called off.[69][70][71]
A spokesperson for Universities UK said: "Both sides are currently engaged in serious and constructive talks at Acas. We are committed to seeking a viable, affordable and mutually acceptable solution to the current challenges facing USS pensions."[72]
UCU's proposal (27 February 2018)
UCU tabled an alternative proposal at the first round of talks with UUK which UCU stated would involve universities accepting some increased risk and small increased contributions from employers and scheme members.[2] UUK's response was that they would need time to cost the union's proposal which it feared would require "very substantial increases in contributions". However, some vice-chancellors voiced support for UCU's plan.[2]
UCU's proposal, along with suggestions for longer-term strategies, was:[73]
- Universities should accept a slightly riskier but probably more lucrative investment strategy, leading to a deficit of £5.1 billion rather than £6.1 billion, a level accepted by the majority of institutions when it was proposed by USS in September 2017.
- Retaining defined benefits on salaries up to £55,550.
- Reducing the annual accrual rate from 1/75 to 1/80.
- Increasing contributions by 2.7% for employers and 1.4% for members (i.e. 4.1% split 65/35 between employers and employees).
The parties held inconclusive talks on 5 March, scheduling the next talks for 7 March.[72] However, a bizarre Twitter spasm from UUK on the night of 5 March insisted that the group was available for talks on 6 March, and this led to talks at noon on 6 March.[74] Talks continued on 7 March, inconclusively. On 8 March, UCU's Higher Education Committee agreed that it would call further strikes if necessary after the Easter vacation, between April and June.[75]
Joint UUK and UCU proposal (12 March 2018)
On the evening of Monday 12 March UCU and UUK issued a joint agreement, arrived at through ACAS, to be put to their respective members.[76]
The agreement was specifically for a three-year "transitional benefit arrangement" lasting from 1 April 2019, maintaining defined benefits up to a salary threshold of £42,000, reducing the accrual rate to 1/85, but raising contributions to 19.3% of salaries for employers and 8.7% for members. The next valuation was to be informed by an "independent expert group", 'aiming to promote greater transparency and understanding' of the methodologies, assumptions, and viability of the scheme. Indexation and revaluation was to be measured using CPI and capped at up to 2.5% p.a. (meaning that if inflation, measured by CPI, rose above 2.5%, the pension would lose value in real terms). UCU was to suspend industrial action and "encourage" branches to reschedule any classes disrupted by the strike. The agreement stated that "there is commitment between both sides to engage in meaningful discussions as soon as possible to explore risk sharing alternatives for the future from 2020, in particular Collective Defined Contributions".[77][78][76]
Vice-chancellors were to inform UUK whether they would back this deal by the end of day on Wednesday 14 March while UCU representatives consulted with their members on whether to reject the deal or not the next day.[76]
Acas agreement withdrawn by UCU (13 March 2018)
Local branch meetings were held on Tuesday 13 March to consider the ACAS agreement. These meetings informed a meeting of elected and branch representatives the same day. This agreement was rejected by UCU's membership on the grounds that it failed to address members' concerns.[79][80][78][81] Many UCU members used the Twitter hashtag #NoCapitulation to express their disapproval of the agreement,[82] helping to co-ordinate a strong response to the proposals.[83][84]
UCU general secretary Sally Hunt said that preparations for strikes during the exam period would be made, while urgently seeking further talks.[81][85]
A UUK spokesperson said:
It is hugely disappointing that students' education will be further disrupted through continued strike action. We have engaged extensively with UCU negotiators to find a mutually acceptable way forward.[86]
In some places, the decision was followed the next day by rallies.[87]
Developments 14–23 March 2018
As of 14 March, UUK's consultation with its members remained ongoing.[88]
A statutory 64-day consultation by USS on pension changes had been due to commence on 19 March, but as of 15 March, USS were declaring an unspecified delay to the commencement of consultations.[89]
On 16 March, UCU called on members employed as external examiners to resign until the dispute was resolved.[90] By 23 March over 600 resignations had occurred.[91]
On 18 March, UUK announced that it would convene an "independent panel", featuring an independent chair and involving academics and pension professionals, to "consider issues of methodology, assumptions and monitoring, aiming to promote greater transparency and understanding of the USS valuation". The panel would invite UCU "to play a full role in providing evidence to the panel" and would also liaise with USS and the pensions regulator.[92][54] UCU's response was that "UCU will of course look at any proposals UUK makes but our members have made it quite clear that what is needed is a much improved offer".[93]
On 22 March, UCU sanctioned fourteen further strike days to fall in the April to June 2018 exam period should the talks fail to come to a resolution.[72]
On 23 March, UNISON announced that its consultative ballot of its USS members had returned 91% support for industrial action, and that it would begin a formal ballot for strike action in April.[94][95][96]
UUK makes a new offer (23 March 2018)
On 23 March, UCU announced a new offer from UUK. This proposed the creation of a formal "Joint Expert Panel" to reconsider how valuations should be undertaken, leaving open the possibility of maintaining the status quo not only for the statutory period up to April 2019, but possibly beyond. The panel would
take into account the unique nature of the HE sector, inter-generational fairness and equality considerations, the need to strike a fair balance between ensuring stability and risk. Recognising that staff highly value Defined Benefit provision, the work of the group will reflect the clear wish of staff to have a guaranteed pension comparable with current provision whilst meeting the affordability challenges for all parties, within the current regulatory framework.[97]
The Financial Times noted that this would be "a far more comprehensive review of the current structure and valuation of the Universities Superannuation Scheme" than previously considered, but also noted that "the new agreement avoids any mention of increases in contributions by either employers or employees to plug the hole in the scheme".[98] UCU was due to consult members' representatives at a formal meeting on 28 March.[98][99]
Meanwhile, on 26 March, the UK's Joint Negotiating Committee for Higher Education Staff began its round of negotiations for pay in the sector for 2018/19, with unions demanding a large pay uplift.[100][101]
New strike dates announced as UCU members balloted on proposal (28 March 2018)
UCU announced that members would be electronically balloted on the new offer in April to decide on the proposal for the Joint Expert Panel.[102] UUK pledged to maintain the current contributions and retirement benefits until at least April 2019 while the review by the panel of experts took place.[102]
At the same time, UCU gave formal notice of a five-day strike action, aimed at disrupting the exams and assessments period, at some universities for 16 to 20 April 2018, potentially to be called off if there was progress in the negotiations.[102] 13 universities including Manchester, Cardiff, Oxford, St Andrews, Leeds and Southampton would be affected by this next round of strikes with the prospect of industrial action at the other 52 universities to take place later in April and continuing into July if no agreement was reached.[102][9] However, staff would not take part in additional strike action if UCU members vote to accept the UUK proposal.[9]
As of 28 March, nearly 700 external examiners had recorded their resignations in a UCU document.[9] The Guardian reported that "students at the end of their courses could find themselves unable to graduate if crucial exams cannot be invigilated, marked or assessed" as a worst-case scenario.[102]
Debate followed among UCU members as to whether to accept the proposals or not.[103] As of 4 April, some branches had decided to recommend that their members reject the proposals as they stood,[104][105] and prominent discontent with the proposals continued to be registered in the run-up to the ballot closing.[106]
UCU accepts UUK proposal (13 April 2018) and Joint Expert Panel is formed
The result of the ballot was the UCU members accepted UUK proposal. Industrial action was suspended and the impending strikes of 16 April were called off.[107][108][109]
Total balloted | 53,415 |
Total votes cast | 33,973 |
Total number valid votes | 33,913 |
Turnout | 63.5% |
Yes to accept the UUK offer | 21,683 (64%) |
No to reject the UUK offer | 12,230 (36%) |
On 18 April, UCU confirmed that it was ending its call for external examiners to stand down.[110] Commentary suggested that scrutiny of the pension negotiations by the union membership was nonetheless ongoing.[111]
On 18 May, UUK and UCU announced that the Joint Expert Panel would be chaired by Joanne Segars.[112][113] On 21 May UCU announced three nominations to the panel.[114] Other members were later determined as Ronnie Bowie, Sally Bridgeland, and Chris Curry (appointed by UUK) and Catherine Donnelly, Saul Jacka, and Deborah Mabbett (appointed by UCU).[115] The Joint Expert Panel was scheduled to report in September.[116]
On 1–3 June, a tumultuous UCU congress included calls for the general secretary, Sally Hunt, to resign over what was perceived to be undemocratic practice within the Union's prosecution of the dispute. Much of the congress's proceedings had to be aborted, and a new congress was proposed for the future.[117] (On 18 October a recalled congress saw the withdrawal of motions to call for resignation, but a motion of censure was passed complaining at a lack of transparency and accountability in Hunt's representation of UCU members during the dispute.[118])
USS plans contribution increases (25 July 2018)
While the Joint Expert Panel deliberated, USS announced that, given that the legal deadline for addressing the fund's deficit had passed, it would, in accordance with statutory procedure, act already to raise both staff and employer contributions, following a statutory consultation period, to maintain the scheme's benefits. The proposed rises (as a percentage of salary) were to be phased in over a year:
Staff contributions | Employer contributions | |
---|---|---|
status quo | 8% | 18% |
April 2019 | 8.8% | 19.5% |
October 2019 | 10.4% | 22.5% |
April 2020 | 11.7% | 24.9% |
These plans were announced against a backdrop of USS's annual report calculations of the deficit falling, due to changing assumptions about factors such as returns on corporate bonds and mortality. On different measures, the 2018 annual report showed a 2014 deficit of 12.6bn falling to a 2018 deficit of 12.1bn; or a £17.5bn deficit falling to £8.4 billion deficit.[116] Though this plan was criticised by UCU and UUK, as of 22 November 2018, USS continued to plan to implement it.[119][120]
Joint Expert Panel releases first report (13 September 2018)
On 13 September, the Joint Expert Panel that had been convened to re-examine the valuation of the USS scheme issued its first report.[121][29] The Panel's press release recommended a number of adjustments to the methodology and data used in the 2017 valuation of the USS scheme, and stated that "it is the Panel’s belief, based on independent actuarial analysis, that the full implementation of these adjustments could mean total required contributions estimated at 29.2% to fund current benefits [...] This compares to the current rate of 26% (18% of salary paid by employers, 8% by employees) and the rate of 36.6% from April 2020 which is proposed by USS, based on the valuation as it stands".[122] It was suggested that this proposal might entail raising employees' contributions to 9.1% of salary, and employers' by 2.1%, taking their contribution to 20.1%.[123]
On 15 October Sam Marsh, of the University of Sheffield, reported in detail on his own analysis of data obtained from USS after a long period of requesting the information. He found that the methodologies by which USS's 'test 1' measures the pension scheme's viability were flawed, and that by maintaining previous investment strategies, USS would have the surplus it would require to meet its future liabilities. UUK asked the USS trustee to investigate Marsh's arguments.[124][125][126] Marsh's commentary had also attracted prominent support from Michael Otsuka.[127] USS defended its position the next day, accepting that Marsh's reanalysis was 'not wrong in isolation', but arguing that de-risking was necessary anyway.[128][129] In response, UCU commissioned an independent report by First Actuarial which on 16 November 2018 supported Marsh's arguments and levelled a number of criticisms at USS's valuations and reasoning.[130]
On 8 November, UUK reported on a consultation of its members, which found them, like UCU, to support the Joint Expert Panel's recommendations.[131] The news was welcomed by UCU.[132] This suggested that a consensus position between these parties had been more or less achieved, meaning that the main faultline in the dispute now ran between USS on the one side, and UCU and UUK on the other.[133]
USS declares 2017 valuation complete but agrees to a new 2018 valuation (22 November 2018)
On 22 November, USS declared that 'as member and employer representatives on the Joint Negotiating Committee could not agree on an alternative outcome to the 2017 valuation', it would maintain the defined benefits scheme but implement contribution increases using the Scheme's default rules for cost-sharing between members and employers, as published on 25 July (starting with a small increase in contributions in April 2019). The 2017 valuation was eventually signed off on 29 January 2019.[134]
However, USS agreed to undertake a new valuation of the fund as it stood at 31 March 2018, which the Joint Expert Panel had suggested would indicate a far smaller deficit. It was thought that this new valuation might forestall further requirements for contribution increases after April 2019.[119][120]
Consultation on 2018 USS valuation closes (28 February 2019)
On 2 January 2019, USS began a consultation with UUK on its 2018 valuation, which closed 28 February. USS proposed that it should be possible to increase overall contributions from 26% of salary (the contribution level that obtained from April 2016 to April 2019) to 29.7% of salary, rather than the higher increases planned in response to the 2017 valuation—but only if scheme members agreed to a system of 'trigger contributions' (additional contributions that would be triggered if short-term measures of deficit exceeded a certain level).[135] UUK members, however, expressed scepticism at the necessity and appropriateness of this arrangement.[136] In response, on 9 May 2019, USS proposed three options 'for finalising the 2018 valuation', retaining the scheme's previous benefits, and requiring lower contributions than the arrangement that the scheme had defaulted to in the absence of an agreement, but requiring much higher contributions than the proposals put forward by the JEP:[137]
- A fixed total contribution rate of 33.7% of salary.
- A standard total contribution rate of 29.7% but with 'sufficiently strong contingent contribution arrangements' enabling higher contributions in certain circumstances.
- A fixed total contribution rate of 30.7%, 'subject to a 2020 valuation'.
Meanwhile, on 15 March the Council of Trinity College, Cambridge voted to withdraw the college unilaterally from USS as of 31 May 2019, in a move that came to be called Trexit. By October 2019, the college had replaced the USS scheme with a defined benefits scheme to avoid the college bearing any responsibility for other pensions in the UK higher education system in the event of foreclosures in the sector. The move sparked protests, resignations, and a boycott.[138][139][140][141][142][143]
On 21 May 2019, it was revealed that Jane Hutton, in her capacity as a non-executive director on the USS board of trustees, had in March 2018 complained to the Pensions Regulator, alleging that her efforts in 2017 to check whether the USS deficit had been miscalculated had been frustrated by delays and obstructions to providing her with data to which she needed access to fulfil her fiduciary duties. As of May 2019, the Pensions Regulator and Financial Reporting Council were investigating the allegations.[144] On 14 June 2019, as the investigation continued, the Regulator rebuked USS for claiming that aspects of USS policy were mandated by the Regulator when in fact they were not.[145] On 11 October 2019, it was reported that Hutton had been dismissed as a director of USS on the grounds that, according to an independent investigation, "she had breached a number of her director’s duties owed under company law and contract". USS said that the dismissal was independent of Hutton's whistleblowing and the ongoing investigation; Hutton said she did not view the decision as valid and was considering further action.[146][147]
On 22 August 2019, the Joint Negotiating Committee, representing UCU and UUK, met to determine the position that they would put to the USS trustees. The independent chair, Andrew Cubie, used his deciding vote to support UUK's preferred plan. In this scheme, total contributions per member would be 30.7% of salary, with 9.6% being paid by the employee and 21.1% by the employer. A further valuation would follow in 2020 and in the absence of an alternative agreement, the contribution rate would rise to 34.7% in October 2021 with members paying 11% and employers 23.7%. UCU argued that employees' contributions should not rise above 8%, and that the Joint Expert Panel had suggested alternative paths to achieving this that had been agreeable to both UCU and UUK. UUK offered to limit staff contributions to 9.1% instead of 9.6% if UCU would agree to hold no strikes on pensions for two years, an offer which UCU rejected.[148][149][150] The 21.1%:9.6% contribution rates were ratified on 12 September by the USS trustee board.
Responses to the 2018 pension strikes
Changes in UK law
The strike brought to the attention of unions and the UK government a potential ambiguity in UK legislation: migrant workers on Tier 2 and 5 visas have an annual 20-day limit on unpaid absence from work.[151]: 13–15 As some universities had seen local strike action during 2017–18 in addition to the 14 days of national strike action, fears arose that staff members who were on strike for more than 20 days in a year might have their visas revoked, and that this might in turn impinge on their legal rights to take industrial action.[152] On 12 July, the home secretary Sajid Javid declared that it was "not the government’s policy to prevent migrant workers from engaging in legal strike action" and that he would introduce changes to the rules and guidelines on immigration to be explicit that strike action did not count as "unpaid absence".[153][154]
Staff
In the ballot for the strike, UCU achieved an unusually high turnout and strong support for industrial action, and membership grew by about 15,000 between the beginning of 2018 and 12 April.[155]
Staff organised "teach-outs" off campus at "every university with a substantial picket line";[156] these featured education sessions which tended to be left-wing or critical of recent changes in UK higher education,[55][157][158][159] apparently led by the University of Leeds, whose UCU branch had tested the model during a local dispute in autumn 2017.[160][161] Some pickets also featured staff singing rewrites of popular songs, among them Leeds University UCU's Strike Up Your Life (based on the Spice Girls' hit Spice Up Your Life)[87] or dance routines, prominently including Cambridge University UCU's performance to Public Enemy's Fight the Power.[162][163] Geographers at the University of Nottingham produced a 'strike zine'.[164] A Cambridge researcher working in the UK under a visa made an art installation reflecting their precarious situation.[151] Meanwhile, Southampton University UCU's 'Dinosaur of Solidarity', a person in a dinosaur costume, became a minor social-media sensation.[165]
As the strikes commenced, academics at Oxford and Cambridge began using those universities' democratic structures to change the universities' position on pension reform.[61][60] Oxford staff's attempts to use the university's supreme governing body, Congregation, to effect a change of policy failed due to procedural problems on 5 March, but the next day Oxford's vice-chancellor Louise Richardson declared that the University would nonetheless heed the wishes of staff to "reverse its response to the UUK survey".[166]
As the strikes developed, university staff increasingly called into question the governance structures of UUK, individual universities, and USS, along with the marketisation of the UK higher education sector and its increasingly precarious workforce.[167][44][168][169] By 13 April, over 12,000 people had signed a petition calling for UUK to be made subject to the Freedom of Information Act 2000.[155]
Staff also made extensive use of social media (see below).
Universities
Universities were represented in the dispute by UUK.
However, some vice-chancellors expressed support for UCU's position before the strike. Anthony Forster, vice-chancellor at the University of Essex, described a staff consultation process that led Essex to support retaining defined benefits via increased pension contributions.[170] The University of Warwick's Stuart Croft publicly stated that "I am sure that I am not alone in being mystified at this [proposed] change",[171] and argued, in line with the position of the Liberal Democrats, that the UK government should underwrite USS pensions.[172]
After the strike began, other vice chancellors voiced concern about UUK's position, and by the second day of strike action, 18 were being reported as calling for renewed negotiations, or as supporting UCU's position.[173] Some joined staff on picket lines, among them Anton Muscatelli (Glasgow), Keith Burnett (Sheffield) and Robert Allison (Loughborough).[174] In a letter to The Times of 16 March, the vice-chancellor of Cambridge University, Stephen Toope, expressed sympathy with the concerns of staff and students about not only pensions, but also marketisation of UK universities,[175][176][177] and held a wide-ranging public meeting with around 550 staff and students in Great St Mary's Church, scheduling a further such meeting for 26 April.[178]
Some universities decided to cushion the financial impact of strike action on their staff by deducting pay for the days not worked over several months. These included Glasgow,[179] Leicester,[180] Cardiff,[181] Cambridge,[182][183] and York.[184]
Video recording of lectures had become widespread in UK universities by 2016,[185] and some universities sought to use lectures recorded in previous years to substitute for teaching missed during the strikes. This prompted renewed debates about what rights universities should claim in the intellectual output of their staff.[186]
Threatened pay deductions for not rescheduling teaching
Conversely, many universities demanded that staff reschedule teaching that had not been delivered during the strike, noting their right to deduct pay for partial performance if staff did not. However, a smaller number appeared to be committed to implementing deductions. Examples which attracted media attention included:
University | Threatened deduction |
---|---|
University of St Andrews | 100%[187][60] |
University of Sheffield | 25%[53][188] |
University of Kent | 50% per breach of contract[189] |
University of Leeds | 25%[190][191][192][193][194] |
Keele University | 20%[60][195] |
In Sheffield's case, pay deduction of 25% for partial performance, rising to 100% after five days, was initially threatened,[196] provoking alumni to threaten to withdraw donations. The University then explained that it would not implement deductions for partial performance.[197][60] Similar developments occurred at St Andrews, with the Principal, Sally Mapstone, writing that "having considered all matters in the round, I believe that our current policy to deduct pay at 100% for failure to reschedule classes cancelled due to strike action is inconsistent with this University's values and the store we place on our shared sense of community".[198] At Leeds, a number of external examiners resigned in protest at the university's plans, ongoing as of 10 March, to deduct pay for partial performance,[199][91] while Alice Goodman, widow of the university's noted professor Geoffrey Hill, addressed an open letter to the university's vice chancellor asking the University to reconsider its stance.[200][201]
Students
Polls
A Yougov poll of 738 undergraduate students conducted for UCU between 13 and 20 February 2018 found that nationally, 61% of students said they supported the strikes, with 19% opposed and the remainder unsure. At striking institutions, support was 66%, with 18% opposed.[57] In February 2018, a poll of 1,500 students for Times Higher Education magazine found over half (51.8%) would support their lecturer in a walk-out and just under a third (29.3%) would not.[202] Support for the national strike was evenly balanced, with 38.4% in favour and 38.4% against.[202]
By 8 March, extensive student support for the strikes was still being reported, observing that students were joining with staff in solidarity against the marketisation of UK higher education.[156]
Occupations and other activism
On the first day of the strikes the UUK head office in London was occupied by students.[203] Students undertook occupations of university buildings in support of the strike at various institutions, including University College London (26 February),[204] the University of Liverpool (28 February)[205] and the University of Bristol (5 March),[206] along with students at Leicester, Bath, Exeter, Southampton, Sussex, and Reading.[11] A fresh wave of occupations began on 12 March, following the publication of the first ACAS-brokered joint agreement between UCU and UUK, which UCU members rejected. Universities with occupations during that week included Reading,[207] Cambridge (in the Old Schools),[208] Dundee,[209] York (in Heslington Hall),[210] Sheffield (in the Arts Tower),[211] Stirling,[212] Aberdeen,[213] Surrey,[214] Sussex,[215] and Glasgow.[216]
The purpose of the occupations extended into other issues: on 19 March, University of London students occupied Senate House in support of a strike called for 25–26 April by outsourced worked including cleaners, porters and receptionists.[217] At one point during the occupation, students were locked into a room by staff members of the university.[218]
In the wake of the February–March strikes, the students' union at SOAS called on its members to refuse to submit work with deadlines before 23 March, arguing that deadlines so soon after the end of the strikes would negatively affect students' work.[219]
Compensation
Students, who in England had since 2012 paid fees covering most of the cost of their education, responded by demanding compensation from their universities, explicitly in support of the striking staff: by 20 February 2018, 70,000 had signed letters and petitions of this kind,[220] rising to around 126,000 by 5 March.[221]
On 4 March 2018, it was reported that King's College London had become the first university to offer to use money not spent on striking staff's salaries to compensate students.[222][223] Robert Liow, a third-year law student at the university, told the BBC that if universities did not refund students part of their fees, they would be profiting from the dispute, as they would gain the money not paid to striking university staff:
I don't want a consumerist education service. I believe education is a public good and not a service to be sold. But if we are going to be treated as consumers we are going to ask for our money back.[4]
On 23 March 2018, it was reported that the international disputes lawyers Asserson had begun co-ordinating a no-win no-fee suit for compensation for students affected by the strikes, inviting students to sign up to participate online.[224] On 24 April 2018, it was announced that over 1,000 students had signed up: enough to apply for a group litigation order.[225] By 17 June, over 5,000 had joined. Asserson estimated that one million students had been affected by the strike, with 575,000 teaching hours lost. They suggested that universities might be liable for £20m compensation.[226]
By May 2019, the Office of the Independent Adjudicator for Higher Education (designated under the Higher Education Act 2004 to run the higher education student complaints scheme within England and Wales) has issued a number of adjudications in response to student complaints, asking universities to offer partial refunds of fees.[227]
In media
On 25 November 2019, Joshua Curiel, a student at the University of Kent, wrote an article for The Guardian encouraging fellow students to support their lectures. Curiel argued that "This strike will have a greater impact if universities see that the lecturers have the full support of their students and understand that changes must be made. We have a part to play in these strikes, to keep the pressure up to ensure fairer working conditions."[228]
Politicians
On 29 November 2017, Carol Monaghan (Scottish National Party) tabled an Early Day Motion in the House of Commons entitled "Defending Academic Pensions", noting "with concern the proposal by Universities UK to close the defined benefit portion of the Universities Superannuation Scheme (USS) to all future service". The motion was sponsored by Caroline Lucas (Green Party), Martyn Day and Pete Wishart (SNP), and Jim Cunningham, and Mary Glindon (Labour). As of 19 March, it had been signed by 133 MPs.[229][230]
During the first week of industrial action, UCU's stance was explicitly supported by the Labour[231] and Green Parties.[232] The Liberal Democrats argued that the government should underwrite the USS pension scheme, easing its assessment of risk.[233] The Conservative universities minister Sam Gyimah encouraged the parties to negotiate, and encouraged universities to compensate students for missed education.[234]
The Chinese embassy in the UK also made representations to the Department for Education, expressing concern for the situation of Chinese students in the UK.[60][235]
UCU
The "intense infighting" experienced by parts of UCU during and following the 2018 pension strikes and negotiations led UCU to establish a 'democracy commission' to recommend ways to improve participatory democracy within the Union. Among its recommendations was the suggestion that the office of General Secretary should be held for three-year terms, and for a maximum of three terms. The commission suggested introducing a mechanism for members to recall general secretaries. Its recommendations were put to a special congress of the union of 7 December 2019.[236]
Scholarly societies
Some scholarly societies issued statements supporting the strike or its goals. They included History UK, which said it 'believes universities should try to maintain the conditions of employment under which academics were originally employed. That includes pensions';[237][238] the Englineering Professors' Council;[239] and the British Dental Association.[240] Others did not take a position but did publicly discuss the issues, among them the British Psychological Society.[241]
Media
Traditional media
The action attracted national television coverage,[242] and supportive editorials from newspapers including the Observer[243] and the Financial Times, which opined that "the universities must increase their pensions offer, and lecturers should give a fair hearing to any new proposals. Failing that, students should be compensated by the colleges".[14] Support for UUK, meanwhile, was offered in The Times, with Daniel Finkelstein, for example, arguing that "the pension fund is a pot of money shared between current and past staff. All that the trustees and the regulator are trying to do is to make sure it is fairly shared out. They are ensuring the money hasn't all been given away while there are people with future claims against it".[244]
A number of commentators expressed exasperation at a tendency in the media, and on social media, to refer to the strike as a "lecturers' strike", when it involved a wide range of staff, academic and non-academic.[245]
Social media
UCU members made extensive use of social media during the dispute. They were used to disseminate activists' research on the changes to pensions.[246] Social media were also used to satirise universities' senior management: for example, the hashtag #FindMyProvost was used to mock vice-chancellors who did not engage with staff,[83] and the 'UCU Strikeposting' meme page on Facebook, which was ran by students and staff who supported the strike, and quickly amassed over 6,000 likes in 4 weeks.[247] Hashtags were also a powerful organising tool. A prominent example was the Twitter hashtag #NoCapitulation, which emerged as the unifying message university staff rallied behind twenty hours after the Acas agreement of 12 March.[5][248] Dr Ed Rooksby, a tutor at Ruskin College Oxford, said "the leadership saw this wave of hostility coming towards them and backed down ... I'm sure there wouldn't have been as much momentum without Twitter, and without someone coming up with that hashtag."[5] Dr. Jo Grady, a senior lecturer in employment relations at Sheffield University, stated her belief that Twitter had helped people connect "outside of traditional union frameworks" and that this was ironic as their employers were the ones who encouraged staff to use social media as a tool for self-promotion.[5]
2019–20 industrial action on pensions and on the 'four fights'
Concern about pay and conditions, particularly in relation to high senior pay and expenditure on new buildings in the face of declining staff pay, the gender pay gap, precarious contracts and casualisation, and workloads were all expressed as part of the wider context of the pensions dispute, but also formed the basis of ballots for industrial action across all UK higher education unions (UNISON, Unite, EIS, GMB and UCU) during the period of the pensions strikes.
Accordingly, from September to October 2019, UCU balloted members for industrial action in two disputes: renewed industrial action on pensions (for those institutions participating in USS), and new industrial action on pay and conditions (which UCU called the 'four fights'—pay inequality, job insecurity, rising workloads, and pay deflation—for all higher education branches). Ballots were undertaken separately for each institution in the belief that turnout might pass the 50% of members required by the Trade Union Act 2016 at a sufficient number of institutions to enable meaningful industrial action, while averting the risk of an aggregated national ballot falling below the 50% threshold. It was argued that it was necessary to make industrial action possible on both issues at once to avoid gains to overall remuneration made via one channel being negated by losses on the other.
Ballot on USS pensions (31 October 2019)
On 26 May 2019, UCU's Higher Education Sector Conference voted to commence a further dispute with USS employers. UCU wrote to relevant vice-chancellors on 7 June asking them to avert possible industrial action by committing "to uphold the level of contributions no higher than 26% (8% for members)", in the first instance by seeking to influence USS policy via employers' representatives on the Employers' Pension Forum (EPF) and the UUK nominees to USS's joint negotiating committee. The Union asked that, failing that, employers "must cover any increases in full that are needed to maintain current benefits until USS’s governance and valuation methods and assumptions have been overhauled".[249]
On 31 October 2019, UCU reported that of 64 branches balloted, at least 43 had passed the 50% turnout threshold or were otherwise able to take industrial action. The national aggregate of votes (with four institutions still to be counted) achieved a 53% turnout with 79% voting for strike action.[250]
Ballots concerning joint higher education trade union national pay claim (31 October 2019)
2018-19 pay negotiations
In March 2018, the UK's Joint Negotiating Committee for Higher Education Staff began its round of negotiations for pay in the sector for 2018/19, with unions demanding a large pay uplift.[100][101] Citing long-term real-term declining pay, on 26 March 2018 the unions submitted a pay claim seeking a 7.5% pay increase or £1,500, whichever was greater; a £10 minimum wage to make all higher education institutions "living wage" employers; and gender pay equality by 2020.[100] In April 2018, the Universities and Colleges Employers Association proposed a 1.7% pay increase for 2018–19, raising the offer to 2% (and 2.8% for the lowest paid) in May. These figures were both below inflation, which in March 2018 stood at 2.7%.[101][251]
On 6 June 2018, UCU commenced a consultative ballot to determine whether to conduct a formal ballot for industrial action in relation to the UK Joint Negotiating Committee for Higher Education Staff's negotiations over 2018-19 pay. The ballot closed on 27 June 2018, with 82% of participating members voting to reject the offer from the University and Colleges Employers' Association of a minimum pay rise of 2 per cent, rising to 2.8 per cent for the lowest paid.[252] UCU formally declared a trade dispute on 24 July 2018.[253] On 21 August 2018, UCU served statutory notice of its intention to ballot members for industrial action regarding the 2018-19 national pay dispute. The ballot opened on 30 August 2018.[252][253] On 22 October 2018 UCU announced the results of the ballot. Although the majority of Union members who voted elected to take industrial action, the turnout only passed the 50% of members required by the Trade Union Act 2016 at seven universities (alongside which three Northern Irish universities, unaffected by the legislation, also voted to strike).[254] Likewise, on 29 October Unison reported that although a majority of voting members had supported strike action, the vote was frustrated by insufficient turnout.[255] On 7 November, UCU's special higher education sector conference decided to run another ballot, this time aggregating votes across the sector rather than running a different ballot for each university. On 23 November, the ballot was scheduled to run from 14 January to 22 February 2019.[256] This ballot achieved a turnout of only 41%, so again led to no industrial action.[254][257][258]
2019-20 pay negotiations
On 1 May 2019, employers' final offer in the 2019-20 pay negotiations was 1.8%, rising to 3.65% for the lowest paid (deleting the lowest point on the pay scale to ensure a living wage for all staff). For most members, the offered raise was below inflation (then 2.4% RPI), and unions called for an increase of RPI+3% or of £3,349 – whichever was greater.[259] Later that month, the UCU congress resolved to campaign to win an industrial action ballot on this offer, with a campaign naming the 'four fights' of pay, equality, casualisation, and workload. Unite and Unison also resolved to ballot on pay.
On 31 October 2019, Unison reported that although around 66% of members voting had voted for strike action, turnout had not passed the 50% threshold.[260] Likewise, Unite announced that 73.3% of members had voted to take action, but that turnout had been 32.1%.[261]
On the same day, UCU reported that of 148 branches balloted, at least 54 had passed the 50% turnout threshold or were otherwise able to take industrial action. The national aggregate of votes achieved a 49% turnout with 74% voting for strike action (with four institutions still to be counted).[250]
UCU announces eight days of strikes (5 November 2019)
On 5 November 2019, UCU announced that at those institutions with a legal mandate to strike, eight consecutive strike days would be held from Monday 25 November to Wednesday 4 December, 'unless', in the words of UCU's general secretary Jo Grady, 'the employers start talking to us seriously about how they are going to deal with rising pension costs and declining pay and conditions'. Following 4 December, Union members were also to begin action short of a strike (such as 'working to contract'). 60 universities were to be affected (43 regarding both pensions and pay, 14 regarding pay only, and 3 regarding pensions only).[262][263][3]
It was estimated that the strikes would affect over a million students.[264]
Spokespeople for UUK and Universities & Colleges Employers Association argued that UCU did not have a strong mandate for action given that the majority of branches had not qualified to take strike action. The UUK spokesperson expressed hopes that the industrial dispute could be resolved without strike action and that UCU 'will now join us to consider governance reforms and alternative options for future valuations' regarding USS. The UCea spokesperson argued that the 2019-20 national pay negotiations had delivered a pay deal 'at the very limit of what is affordable'.[265] Opinion among university leaders was not uniform, however: on 15 November, the vice-chancellor of the University of Essex argued that 'the University of Essex is willing to increase contributions to the scheme to sustain critical features of the USS, including defined benefits'.[266][267][267]
On 19 November, UUK and UCEA jointly wrote an open letter 'to staff impacted by the UCU pensions and pay disputes', partly arguing that 'the publication of the JEP's second report will present UUK and UCU with the opportunity to develop a valuable and sustainable future for USS' and that while universities 'simply cannot afford to put more into this year's pay increases than they already have', UCEA had invited negotiations on 'workload, gender pay/equality and casual employment arrangements'.[268] UCU's response included the argument that 'you cannot refuse to talk about pay yet say you want to talk about closing pay gaps that exist for women and BME staff' and that 'we are always keen to negotiate and will attend talks to try and avert the disruption the strikes will inevitably cause'.[269]
Strikes take place (25 November–4 December 2019)
Strikes began on 25 November. According to figures subsequently gathered by UCEA, 29.2% of UCU members at the affected universities took strike action, representing 5% of all staff at those universities (not all of whom were in the constituency represented by UCU), though around 26% reported pockets of high impact on teaching.[270]
As in 2018, striking staff at a number of universities ran educational 'teach-outs' off campus, which were open to students affected by the strikes.[271] On 27 November, negotiators from UCU and UCEA met, with UCEA pledging to consult its members on 'gender and ethnicity pay gaps, casual employment arrangements and workload' ahead of a meeting the next week, while stating that it had no mandate to alter the pay increase that had been implemented for the 2019–20 academic year.[272][273]
Employers' organisations continued to argue that the strike represented a minority of staff in a minority of universities,[274] with Oxford Brookes University's vice-chancellor Alistair Fitt arguing further that 'the call for more money comes at a time when universities are operating in a challenging environment amid increased competition, a freeze on tuition fees, and prolonged uncertainty over the implications of Brexit'.[275] A few universities were reported as being heavy-handed in their response to the strikes, with the University of Liverpool attracting criticism for telling its students they must not join picket lines;[276] Sheffield Hallam putting a form online for students to record which lecturers were on strike (which attracted a large number of satirical submissions);[277] and the University of Birmingham telling its staff that picketing on campus would be trespass (which attracted a large petition in opposition).[278]
As the strikes began, the Guardian published an editorial arguing that the strikes represented "a battle for the soul of the campus" and that "the market model in higher education has created an intellectual precariat who are right to fight back".[279] Soon after, the Financial Times ran en editorial arguing that "while academics and universities might not want to hear it, if the USS is to continue operating, the money has to come from them", and also saying that "the current industrial action carries wider significance than the fate of a disputed retirement plan. It has exposed the precariousness of Britain's higher education system as it has become more of a marketplace", and calling for an "independent inquiry" into the handling of the USS valuation "by all key players, including the Pensions Regulator".[280]
The National Union of Students supported the strikes, as did the Labour shadow secretary for education, Angela Rayner.[281][282] Support from individual university students' unions was less clear, with some, such as the University of Birmingham Guild of Students, taking an explicitly neutral stance.[278] Reading University Students Union voted to support the strikes, but was unusual in doing so.[283] The Times reported that 'by and large' students 'support their lecturers and their anger is with universities and vice-chancellors'.[284] In Edinburgh, students occupied David Hume Tower in solidarity with the strike,[285] while students at Strathclyde University occupied a lecture theatre (both in support of the strikes and in protest at what they called 'rampant mismanagement, alleged corruption and irresponsible fossil fuel investment at the University of Strathclyde').[286][287] Students at the University of Stirling occupied a management building for two weeks, later receiving an eight-week suspension in punishment.[288]
Some scholarly societies, such as the American Studies Association, expressed support for the strike.[289]
The 2019 strikes took place in a somewhat different regulatory and legal environment from the 2018 ones, due to the establishment of the Office for Students and the emergence of a body of case-law from the Office of the Independent Adjudicator on the compensation of students for lost teaching in the wake of the 2018 strikes.[290][291] Growing anxiety about the position of international students whose visa requirements for class attendance might be affected by the strikes, in the context of the UK Home Office's hostile environment policy towards migrants, was also in evidence.[276] The University of Liverpool and Goldsmiths University attracted particular attention for telling international students that missing classes on account of refusing to cross picket lines might jeopardise their visas.[276][292]
Following strike action (5–12 December 2019)
In the wake of the strike action, UCU called for 'action short of a strike' in the form of 'working to contract', interpreted primarily as working only the hours notionally required and not rescheduling teaching missed during the strikes. As in 2018, universities' responses to this varied, with some threatening pay deductions for 'partial performance' in the event of staff not rescheduling teaching and others not planning to deduct pay.[293][294] Press coverage included mentioning the University of Liverpool for threatening partial pay deductions[295] and Reading for threatening 100% pay deductions,[296] whereas Cambridge offered to reimburse lecturers for pay lost during the strikes if they rescheduled teaching.[295]
On 4 December, UCU began reballoting thirteen branches which had nearly succeeded in achieving the 50% voter turnout necessary to take strike action, in the belief that the strike action at other branches would galvanise members into voting. It was believed that this would strengthen the threat of further industrial action.[297][298]
Second report of the Joint Expert Panel on pensions (13 December 2019)
13 December saw the publication of the Joint Expert Panel's second report. This recommended changes to the governance of USS, to build on "the establishment of a new, jointly agreed purpose statement and shared valuation principles".[299][300] Reporting focused on the Panel's proposal to introduce a dual discount rate[disambiguation needed] into the USS pension scheme, whereby the fund supporting members who had retired would be put into low-risk, low-return investments, but the remainder of the fund (accruing to working members who had not yet retired) would be free to be invested in higher-risk, higher-return holdings.[301][302] The report was welcomed by UUK and UCU and media reporting suggested that negotiations in its wake could lead to the cessation of impending industrial action;[303] as strikes loomed in February, however, the UCU general secretary Jo Grady commented that 'most importantly, employers have not yet offered to cover the unfair contribution increases that are pricing members out of the scheme', implying that this was a key sticking point.[304]
The report also recommended three-way talks between UCU, UUK and USS on the governance of USS to lead to future pension policies being more satisfactory to scheme stakeholders. The 'tripartite group' first met on 17 January 2020.[305]
In mid-January 2020, the University of Sussex launched an "industrial action ex gratia scheme" to compensate students up to £100 for inconvenience caused by the ongoing industrial action. It this became the first UK university to offer compensation while industrial action was still in process.[306]
On 15 January, the Wellcome Trust published the report 'What Researchers Think About the Culture They Work In',[307] which found that 29% of respondents felt secure in their jobs.[308] On 20 January, UCU published a report on 'the dehumanising effects of casualisation in higher education' that noted that '67,000 research staff were on fixed-term contracts, making up two-thirds of the total research staff employed at universities, alongside 30,000 contracted teaching staff, many paid by the hour. A further 69,000 academic staff were on "atypical contracts" and so are not counted in the main staff record, while an estimated 6,500 were on zero-hours contracts'.[309][310]
UCEA publish negotiating position (27 January 2020)
On 27 January, UCEA published a document 'offered as part of a potential composite JNCHES settlement for 2019-20' addressing the Four Fights issues, with the exception of pay (where the pay rise offered remained at 1.8%).[311][312] UCEA noted that it had been 'given the scope to go further than ever before as a national employer representative body', proposed to set 'expectations' for the employment practices of individual institutions, and summarised its offer at sector-level thus:[313]
- For contractual arrangements, a new trade union/employer working group to examine the annual national staff record (HESA), looking for example at trends in 'zero hours' and 'hourly-paid' employment, and contractual arrangements across protected characteristics. The group will produce a report of the analysis and findings.
- For workload and mental health, trade union/employer work to further develop the national Stress and Mental Wellbeing resources through our established HE Safety and Health Forum, Trade unions, Universities UK and UCEA involvement in advancing sector-level initiatives to address staff mental health issues.
- For gender pay gap, trade unions and employers to develop an HE specific 'checklist' of suggestions to address blockages and enablers of women’s career progression and balanced representation in gender dominated roles. There will also be collection and analysis of the overall data.
- On ethnicity pay, trade unions and employers to examine and report on national ethnicity pay gap data and investigate kinds of actions and interventions being taken by employers. Both also commit to encouraging colleagues to disclose protected characteristics.
UCU welcomed these offers as progress but criticised the lack of an improved offer on pay and argued that UCEA needed to provide universities with 'a clear set of mechanisms for policing and enforcing the expectations which they are signing up to'.[312]
Fourteen more universities ballot for strike action (29 January 2020)
On 29 January 2020, UCU announced results from the December–January reballots of selected universities that had failed to secure a 50% turnout in the 2019 ballots. As a result, two further universities joined the disputes on pensions and pay/conditions; nine joined the dispute on pay/conditions alone; and three joined the dispute on pensions alone; and two that had been on strike about pensions only added pay/conditions to their disputes. The number of institutions with a mandate to strike at this point stood at 74 in total: 47 for pay/conditions and pensions, 22 for pay/conditions only, and 5 for pensions only.[314]
Strikes recommence (20 February 2020)
Before the strikes
On 3 February 2020, following consultation with branch representatives at the union's Higher Education Committee, UCU announced fourteen days of strike action, escalating over a period running from 20 February to 13 March: 20–21 February, 24–26 February, 2–5 March and 9–13 March.[315][316][317]
During February, UUK consulted its members on the possibility of making a new offer in the pensions dispute, responding to UCU's request that employers shoulder more of the burden of rising pensions contributions. 84% opposed the idea of making a new offer. Meanwhile, UCEA did not alter the offer it had made on 27 January.[318][319] During the same period, the Times Higher Education reported restiveness among some UCU members about the desirability of further strikes.[320]
Weeks 1-2 (20–26 February)
Strikes began on 20 February, with 74 universities affected, and news reporting on the day focusing on the determination of striking staff picketing in rainy weather.[41][321][322][323] Following a few days with little apparent progress,[324] UCEA resumed negotiations with UCU on Monday 24 February,[325] and UUK resumed negotiations on Tuesday 25th.[326] Negotiations continued throughout that week.[327]
Week 3 (2–5 March)
Negotiations went on.[328][329] and, following the leaking of minutes from a Russell Group meeting about casualisation, the Russell Group issued a statement pledging to address casualisation in that part of the university sector.[330][331][332][333]
By the end of the third week of strike action (Friday 6 March), UCU summarised the position of negotiations as showing good progress on achieving a UK-wide, sector level framework to address casualisation, gender pay-gaps, and workload, with continued debate concerning the pay deal. Regarding pensions, the Union represented UUK as putting more pressure on USS for reform, but little progress on convincing employers to shoulder a higher proportion of rising pension contributions.[334][335]
Week 4 (9–13 March)
Little news emerged from negotiations, and on 11 March UCU negotiators on the Four Fights made it clear that good progress had been made on three, but that the sticking point for them was pay, and argued that UCU members would need to continue industrial action to achieve improvements in that area.[336]
Meanwhile, debate on USS was complicated by USS beginning their 2020 valuation, with UCU criticising USS's valuation methods and calling on UUK for support. No significant change appeared to have come about in employers' willingness to shoulder more of the rising costs of the pension scheme.[337]
As the strikes came to an end, UK universities found themselves under a relatively sudden set of pressures as the COVID-19 pandemic led to falling projections for international student recruitment,[338] and UK universities rapidly switching their teaching to online modes.[339][340][341] UCU cancelled rallies on the last day of strikes to reduce the risk of infection.[342]
Responses to the strike
Student support at the outset of the strike was estimated at 47% by an unscientific poll reported by the BBC.[343] With continued NUS support for the strikes, twenty-six students' unions wrote to the Minister of State for Universities, the chairs of the UCEA and USS trustee boards and the Chief Executive of Universities UK, expressing support for UCU and urging a swift resolution to the strikes.[344] As in previous strikes, there was a student occupation, in this case of the Old Schools in Cambridge.[345]
UCU members continued to find innovative ways to picket, with developments including a group of picketing runners circumnavigating the University of Leeds campus.[346]
After the strikes
The prospect of convulsive changes to university staff workload and working conditions caused by universities' responses to the pandemic increased the complexities and tensions surrounding the dispute.[339] To continue legally constituted industrial action, most branches at this time needed to reballot for action; however, the reballots were postponded due to the crisis, and the legal mandate for industrial action expired on 28 April 2020.[347]
Against the backdrop of the closure of UK campuses and an improvised sector-wide shift to online teaching, negotiations on the disputes continued. On 1 April 2020, UCEA tabled a new offer regarding the Four Fights dispute.[348] As before, there was no increase in UCEA's previous pay increase offer of 1.8%, but the offer did include more explicit resolutions to establish sector-wide 'expectations' and 'recommendations' that all employers should implement through action and negotiation with unions at a local level. On 16 May UCU announced that it would convene representatives from its branches on 26 May with a decision about the Union's next step to be taken by its Higher Education Committee the next day.[349]
The dispute over the USS pension was also cast into a new light by the economic shock of the pandemic and fears over the short-time financing of the UK higher education sector;[350] the fund breached a self-sufficiency measure on 12 March and reported itself to The Pensions Regulator accordingly. Fears were made more acute by the fact that USS's statutory annual valuation date fell on 31 March, in the midst of the economic crash.[351] In April 2020, UCU and UUK issued a joint statement on their position in relation to USS, in this respect presenting a united front against the pension trustees.[352]
Table of UK higher education strikes 2018–20
2018[2] | 2019[353] | 2020[314] | 2018-20 | |||
USS | USS | Four Fights | USS | Four Fights | Local disputes | |
Aberdeen, University of | × | × | × | |||
Aberystwyth University | × | |||||
Aston University | × | × | × | × | × | |
Bangor University | × | × | × | × | × | |
Bath, University of | × | × | × | × | × | |
Bath Spa University | × | |||||
Birkbeck College, University of London | × | × | × | |||
Birmingham, University of | ? | × | × | × | × | 2019: Caterers, cleaners, and security guards in Unison to secure a local pay increase of 4.85% for the lowest-paid, scaling to 3% for the highest paid.[354] |
Bishop Grosseteste University | × | × | ||||
Bournemouth University | × | × | ||||
Bradford, University of | × | × | × | × | × | |
The University of Brighton | × | × | ||||
Bristol, University of | × | × | × | × | × | |
Brunel University | × | |||||
Cambridge, University of | × | × | × | × | × | |
Cardiff University | × | × | × | × | × | |
City, University of London | × | × | × | × | × | |
Courtauld Institute of Art | × | × | × | × | × | |
Cranfield University | × | |||||
De Montfort University | × | |||||
Dundee, University of | × | × | × | × | × | |
Durham University | × | × | × | × | × | |
East Anglia, University of | × | × | × | × | ||
East London, University of | × | |||||
Edge Hill University | × | × | ||||
Edinburgh, University of | × | × | × | × | × | |
Essex, University of | × | × | × | × | × | |
Exeter, University of | × | × | × | × | × | |
Glasgow Caledonian University | × | × | ||||
Glasgow School of Art | × | × | ||||
Glasgow, University of | × | × | × | × | × | |
Goldsmiths, University of London | × | × | × | × | × | |
Greenwich, University of | × | |||||
Heriot-Watt University | × | × | × | × | × | |
Huddersfield, University of | × | |||||
Hull, University of | × | |||||
Imperial College London | × | × | ||||
Institute for Development Studies | × | × | ||||
Institute of Education | × | |||||
Keele University | × | × | ||||
Kent, University of | × | × | × | |||
King's College London | × | × | ||||
Lancaster, University of | × | × | × | × | × | |
Leeds Trinity University | × | |||||
Leeds, University of | × | × | × | × | × | |
Leicester, University of | × | × | × | × | × | |
Liverpool Hope University | × | × | ||||
Liverpool Institute of Performing Arts | × | × | ||||
Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine | × | |||||
Liverpool, University of | × | × | × | × | × | |
London, University of | 2018: cleaners, porters, and receptionists to get their work insourced.[355] | |||||
London School of Economics | ? | |||||
London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine | × | |||||
Loughborough University | × | × | × | × | × | |
Manchester, University of | × | × | × | × | × | |
Newcastle University | × | × | × | × | × | |
Nottingham, University of | × | × | × | × | × | |
Open University | × | × | × | × | × | |
Oxford, University of | × | × | × | × | ||
Queen Margaret University, Edinburgh | × | × | ||||
Queen Mary, University of London | × | × | × | × | × | |
Queen's University Belfast | × | × | × | × | × | |
Reading, University of | × | × | × | × | × | |
Roehampton University | × | × | ||||
Royal College of Art | × | |||||
Royal Holloway, University of London | × | × | × | × | × | |
Royal Veterinary College, University of London | × | |||||
Ruskin College | ? | |||||
Salford, University of | × | |||||
Scottish Association of Marine Science | × | × | ||||
Senate House, University of London | × | |||||
Sheffield Hallam University | × | × | ||||
Sheffield, University of | × | × | × | × | × | |
SOAS, University of London | × | × | × | |||
Southampton, University of | × | × | × | × | × | |
St Andrews, University of | × | × | × | × | × | |
St George's, University of London | ? | |||||
St Mary's University College, Belfast | × | × | ||||
Stirling, University of | × | × | × | × | × | |
Strathclyde, University of | × | × | × | × | × | |
Surrey, University of | × | |||||
Sussex, University of | × | × | × | × | × | |
University College London | × | × | × | × | × | 2019: cleaners winning insourcing.[356] |
Scottish Association for Marine Science at University of the Highlands and Islands | × | × | × | |||
Suffolk, University | ? | |||||
Swansea University | ? | |||||
UAL London College of Arts | × | |||||
Ulster University | × | × | × | × | × | |
Wales, University of | × | × | × | × | × | |
Warwick, University of | × | × | × | × | × | |
Winchester, University of | × | |||||
York, University of | × | × | × | × | × |
See also
References
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{{cite web}}
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- ^ See further 'How we got to yesterday and what's next' (14 March 2018).
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{{cite web}}
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- ^ Richard Adams, 'University staff vote on pensions offer – without a deal in sight', The Guardian (4 April 2018).
- ^ Sophie Inge, 'Under-pressure UCU leader urges members to accept pensions deal', Times Higher Education (4 April 2018).
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- ^ Freedman, Des (16 April 2018). "Universities ending the strikes is not a climbdown – the fight goes on | Des Freedman". the Guardian. Retrieved 20 April 2018.
- ^ 'UCU and UUK announce appointment of Chair for USS Joint Expert Panel', 18 May 2018.
- ^ UCU and UUK announce appointment of Chair for USS Joint Expert Panel' (18 May 2018).
- ^ 'UCU announces nominations to USS joint expert pane[permanent dead link]' (221 May 201).
- ^ The Joint Expert Panel on the Universities Superannuation Scheme commissioned by the University and College Union and Universities UK, 'Report of the Joint Expert Panel' (September 2018), pp. 70-71.
- ^ a b "USS announces increases in higher education pension contributions".
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- ^ Jack Grove, 'UCU’s Sally Hunt censured over handling of pensions strike', Times Higher Education (18 October 2018).
- ^ a b 'Concluding the 2017 valuation' (22 November 2018).
- ^ a b Jack Grove, 'USS to revisit £7.5 billion deficit valuation', Times Higher Education (22 November 2018).
- ^ The Joint Expert Panel on the Universities Superannuation Scheme commissioned by the University and College Union and Universities UK, 'Report of the Joint Expert Panel' (September 2018).
- ^ 'USS Joint Expert Panel' (13 September 2018).
- ^ Jack Grove, 'Pay extra 1% of salary to save USS pension benefits, says panel', Times Higher Education (13 September 2018).
- ^ Josephine Cumbo, 'University pension fund accused of exaggerating shortfall', The Financial Times (16 October 2018).
- ^ Sam Marsh, 'A flawed valuation: the layperson’s guide to my findings on USS’s ‘Test 1’' (15 October 2018).
- ^ Felicity Callard, Jo Grady, Nick Hardy, Jaya John John, Nicky Priaulx, and Ruth Stirton, 'Sam Marsh exposes new problems in the USS valuation', USSbriefs, 59 (16 October 2018).
- ^ Michael Otsuka, 'USS’s valuation rests on a large and demonstrable mistake' (13 October 2018).
- ^ 'Claims of a ‘large and demonstrable error’ in the valuation', (16 October 2018).
- ^ Jack Grove, 'Universities Superannuation Scheme rejects valuation error claim', Times Higher Education (17 October 2018).
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{{cite web}}
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External links
- Hill, Peter, Narrative of a Strike.
- Hillman, Nick, 'The USS: How did it come to this?', HEPI Report 115 (Higher Education Policy Unit, 2019)
- McKnight, Heather, 'The Sussex Campus "Forever Strike": Estrangement, Resistance and Utopian Temporality', Studies in Arts and Humanities, 5.1 (2019), 145–72.
- Rocha, Leon, 'The House of Mirth' (Twitter docu-thread).
- Thurley, Djuna, "Universities Superannuation Scheme (USS)", House of Commons Library, briefing paper CBP-8156 (20 February 2018).
- USS Briefs
- Joint Expert Panel website
- Archive of 2018 USS strike material