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Investigation

Are all schools really getting extra funding?

Critics accuse ministers of 'levelling down', particularly in areas such as London
5 min read
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Ministers like to shout about increased budgets this year, promising all schools more funding per pupil. But what鈥檚 the reality? Tom Belger investigates…

The government is slashing per-pupil funding for more than 1,300 schools next year 鈥 and overall budgets for thousands more 鈥 despite rampant inflation, new analysis shows.

The findings undermine ministers鈥 .

Critics also accuse ministers of 鈥渓evelling down鈥, particularly in areas such as London which has been hit hard by falling rolls and funding reforms.

Ministers鈥 funding claims challenged

Jonathan Gullis, the new school standards minister, recently said schools would receive 拢1.5 billion more in 2023-24.

Will Quince, his predecessor, said over the summer that a funding floor ensured 鈥渆very school attracts at least 0.5 per cent more pupil-led funding per pupil鈥.

But analysis of provisional by the and Schools Week suggests a less rosy picture.

More than a third of primaries and a quarter of secondaries face per-pupil hikes of below 1 per cent next year under the schools part of the national funding formula.

schools funding
Quince

This is despite inflation running at 9.9 per cent, and higher-than-expected energy and pay costs.

In reality the Department for Education plans to cut per-pupil budgets for some 1,266 primaries and 105 secondaries. They face average falls of 2.7 per cent.

Andrew Baisley, a National Education Union (NEU) analyst, said: 鈥淚t gives the lie to the idea all schools are seeing funding rise. Funding鈥檚 being levelled down to the lowest rates.鈥

Ministers鈥 comments were 鈥渟elective鈥, he said.

Quince referred to protecting 鈥減upil-led funding鈥, which normally makes up the majority of budgets (in per-pupil terms). However, so-called school-led funding, which accounts for 7 per cent of average budgets, is not.

School-led funding includes a flat per-school sum and top-ups for small, remote and private finance initiative schools, or exceptional costs.

Small primaries take funding hit

The 1,371 schools losing out 鈥 spread across every region 鈥 are mainly small primaries, which are more reliant on this unprotected funding. Rolls and budgets have risen in most, but not enough to sustain per-pupil levels.

schools funding
Bousted

Yet 128 small schools face not only per-pupil, but also overall funding cuts. Their declines average 3.9 per cent (拢87,000), almost double the average 2 per cent drop in the number of pupils. 鈥淚t鈥檚 concerning, and not easily explained,鈥 Baisley said.

The DfE said declines could reflect changing school circumstances such as moving from a split to a single site, or falling business rates requiring lower subsidies.

Meanwhile, Quince said the national funding formula reforms meant a 1.9 per cent hike in not only per-pupil, but also overall funding.

But such figures obscure who wins and loses. Some 6,163 schools, almost a third, will attract less overall funding next year, losing 拢297.3 million between them.

Dr Mary Bousted, the joint general secretary of the NEU, said pupils faced 鈥渁nother punishing round of cuts鈥.

Figures do not include extra pots such as high-needs funding, but some schools say costs exceed such budgets 鈥 and figures exclude some councils鈥 deductions.

London schools feel family exodus

The overall funding cuts unsurprisingly seemed partly linked to pupil numbers, with average rolls in affected schools dropping 4.7 per cent this year.

Falling birth rates have reduced primary rolls since 2019, with a bulge in students moving into secondary schools.

London is particularly squeezed. It is the only region with falling total pupil numbers, losing 7,000 this year. Inner London faces the lowest total (0.1 per cent) and per-pupil (1.3 per cent) cash rises,

while some regions will have total or per-pupil gains of 2.5 per cent or more.

Nine councils鈥 schools face net declines in overall funding 鈥 all in London. Hackney, Lambeth and Haringey will lose more than 拢1 million each.

Rolls in Hackney鈥檚 primaries have dropped 13 per cent since 2016, with one in ten Haringey reception places unfilled.

schools funding

Both councils鈥 education chiefs say affordable housing shortages are driving families outside London with many European families moving abroad since Brexit.

One London primary head said some families had made a 鈥渓ifestyle choice鈥 to leave London since Covid, seeking green space and benefiting from remote working.

Councils and trusts can partially redistribute cash to protect schools. But it means cuts elsewhere 鈥 and council freedom to deviate from national funding formula rules has been gradually curbed.

Hackney is losing its ability to be more generous overall; Haringey its ability to weight funding more towards pupils on free school meals.

The NFF, designed to equalise per-pupil funding nationwide with some areas such as London better funded than others, has also cut relative premiums each deprived pupil attracts.

The National Audit Office links this to real-terms declines in per-pupil funding since 2017 in deprived London boroughs, and cities such as Birmingham.

Fewer pupils, but school maintenance the same

Jo Riley, the head of Randal Cremer Primary School in Hackney, said London schools faced 鈥渃onstant juggling to balance the budget鈥.

鈥淓very year, when I look at predicted numbers my heart sinks at having to make yet another round of redundancies.鈥

She added that although funding declined, her Victorian school cost 鈥渏ust as much to maintain as when we had more children鈥.

schools funding
Riley

The Lion Academy Trust has 鈥渟ought to diversify鈥 beyond London into 鈥渁reas where the NFF was more favourable鈥.

Chris Stark, its chief executive, said pressures meant many London schools 鈥渟imply have to be the local school of choice鈥.

Haringey will consult next month on 鈥渞eductions in school capacity鈥.

Simon Pink, the finance director at the Elliot Foundation, predicts wider 鈥渞ationalisation鈥. It closed Lena Gardens, a west London primary, in 2019, blaming Brexit and welfare cuts for unviable pupil numbers.

With less funding for deprived areas, including outside London, the NFF has also 鈥済ot away from what additional funding was designed to do鈥.

Pink said the trust鈥檚 schools had not seen 鈥渁nything like鈥 the average per-pupil hikes highlighted by government. Next year would be 鈥減ainful鈥.

A government spokesperson highlighted a 7 per cent per-pupil rise to core funding in 2022-23, and said the NFF 鈥渄istributes this funding fairly. No school is receiving a per-pupil 鈥榗ut鈥 to pupil-led funding.鈥

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