Research reveals more than a quarter of universities have food banks

Researchers are calling for urgent action to support students

Author: Abi SimpsonPublished 14th Sep 2023

A call for urgent action to support students is being made by researchers who've revealed more than a quarter of UK universities have a food bank service.

A think tank's found one in 10 universities are giving out food vouchers.

The Higher Education Policy Institute (HEPI) found universities in Wales, the South West, the North East and the South East were most likely to operate a food bank, while those in Northern Ireland and London were least likely, the research said.

The HEPI report was based on a website audit of the 140 members of Universities UK, to see their strategies for supporting students.

Just over half were found to offer discounts on food, while 27% were operating a food bank and 11% were giving out vouchers.

A third of Russell Group universities – some of the most prestigious UK institutions – were found to be operating a food bank, compared with 26% of other universities.

The report noted ā€œa range of innovative interventionsā€, including at the University of Manchester which saw a cost-of-living working group established and Ā£170 payments made to more than 90% of its students.

Calls for urgent action

HEPI has called on all universities to establish similar working groups, launch emergency funds and include students throughout their cost-of-living response, while it said student unions can encourage their university to act by mounting cost-of-living campaigns ā€œfounded on strong evidence and excellent relationships with university staffā€.

It said the Government should establish a cost-of-living taskforce which consults regularly with students and sector leaders, and called on Westminster and devolved governments to routinely increase the student maintenance loan in line with inflation.

Dr Simon Merrywest, director of student experience at the University of Manchester, said the report ā€œraises important questions about whether universities should themselves be the ones to plug the growing gaps in student financeā€.

He added: ā€œThis report clearly highlights the strength and breadth of the response of the sector to the recent cost-of-living crisis, with co-created solutions between students and university leaders at its heart.

ā€œThe financial squeeze of the last two years has brought into even sharper relief pressures on students that have been growing for many years.ā€

"Students experience their second major crisis in four years"

Report author Josh Freeman said universities are ā€œstepping up as students experience their second major crisis in four yearsā€, after the pandemic.

But he said more can be done, adding: ā€œIt is past time for the Westminster Government to address the real-terms decline in maintenance support, which leaves too many students at risk of deprivation – in what are supposed to be the best years of their lives.ā€

Professor Nick Braisby, vice-chancellor at Buckinghamshire New University, said he was proud that his institution had been recognised for its ā€œcomprehensive award-winning support package, enabled by agile leadership, flexible processes and committed staffā€.

He added: ā€œBut universities should not and cannot bear responsibility alone for addressing the cost-of-living crisis facing our students.

ā€œWe concur with the report’s call for Government to do much more – if they do not, higher education study will simply become unaffordable for many of our students.

ā€œIgnoring their needs will cause immense damage to our higher education sector, to our society and to our students’ life chances.ā€

What's the Government saying?

A spokesperson for the Department for Education said: ā€œMany of our universities are doing a brilliant job to support students who are struggling financially through a variety of programmes, and we urge students who are worried about their circumstances to speak to their university.

ā€œWe are supporting universities to help students who are struggling financially by making Ā£276 million available this academic year, which institutions can use to top up their own hardship schemes. This is on top of increases to student loans and grants.ā€

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