DESPITE THE UK GOVERNMENT ALLOCATING over £7 billion extra for schools in England in the 2019 Spending Round, core spending per pupil in 2022–23 will still be about one to two per cent lower in real terms than in 2009–10.
School spending per pupil fell in England by nine per cent in real terms between 2009–10 and 2019–20. The extra spending will reverse most, but not all, of this cut.
Schools serving the most disadvantaged pupils have seen the biggest cuts over the last decade. Having been introduced in 2018, the National Funding Formula for schools has ensured extra funding flows to areas that have become more disadvantaged over time. However, as a whole, the formula has provided a bigger funding boost to more affluent areas than to disadvantaged areas.
These are the main conclusions of new research at the Institute for Fiscal Studies, funded by the Nuffield Foundation. This examines trends in day-to-day core school spending in England and excludes extra spending during the pandemic, such as the £3 billion allocated so far for catch-up spending. This report forms part of a wider programme of work looking at trends and challenges in education spending.
Other key findings include:
- Total school spending per pupil in England was just over £6,500 in the latest complete year of data in 2019–20.This is nine per cent lower in real terms than its high-point of £7,200 in 2009–10.
- The government has allocated an extra £7.1 billion for schools in England through to 2022–23.Whilst this will increase spending per pupil by over eight per cent, school spending per pupil in 2022–23 will still be one per cent lower in 2009–10 after accounting for overall inflation or two per cent after accounting for the growth in specific costs faced by schools.
- Deprived schools have seen larger cuts.The most deprived secondary schools saw a 14 per cent real-terms fall in spending per pupil between 2009–10 and 2019–20, compared with a nine per cent drop for the least deprived schools.
- Whilst the National Funding Formula for schools has helped to ensure funding for different areas reflects the way they have changed over time, it has also provided bigger funding boosts for the least deprived schools.Between 2017–18 and 2022–23, funding allocated for the least deprived schools will increase by eight to nine per cent in real terms compared with five per cent for the most deprived schools.
- Over the long run, spending per pupil has gone up faster in primary schools than in secondary schools.In the late 1980s, secondary school spending per pupil was over 60 per cent higher than spending in primary schools. In 2019–20, the difference was only 14 per cent.
Luke Sibieta, Research Fellow and author, said: “The nine per cent fall in school spending per pupil in England over the decade between 2009 and 2019 is the largest in more than 40 years, and probably a lot longer. The fact that it still won’t have recovered back to 2009 levels by 2022 shows just how big the squeeze has been.
“This will make it that much harder for schools to address the major challenge of helping pupils catch up on lost learning alongside everything else they are required to do. Schools serving disadvantaged communities face the biggest challenges. They faced the biggest cuts up to 2019 and are now receiving the smallest rises. This pattern runs counter to the government’s aim of levelling up poorer parts of the country.”
Josh Hillman, Director of Education at the Nuffield Foundation, said: “This IFS research reveals that the largest reductions in per pupil spending have been experienced by schools in deprived areas. We also know that the most disadvantaged pupils are more likely to be behind on their learning as a result of disruptions to their education during the Covid-19 crisis. It is crucial that schools in deprived areas receive appropriate and well-directed funding so that they can help to close the disadvantage gap and ensure all children can reach their potential.”
* Read School spending in England: trends over time and future outlook here.
Source: Institute for Fiscal Studies