- About Us
- About Colleges
-
Corporate Services
- Corporate Services
- Brexit
- Data Protection/GDPR
-
Employment Services - college workforce
- Employment Services - college workforce
- Introduction & Employment Helpline
- Absence & Sickness Management
- Contracts and T&Cs
- Disciplinary, Capability & Grievance
- Employment Briefings Library
- Equality, Diversity & Inclusion
- General Employee Relations & HR Issues
- Health & Wellbeing
- Industrial Relations
- Pay & Pensions
- Recruitment
- Redundancy, Restructuring & TUPE
- Safeguarding/Prevent
- Workforce Benchmarking, Surveys & Research
- Governance
- Projects
- Resources/Guidance
- Sustainability & Climate Action Hub
- Events
- Funding & Finance
-
Policy
- Policy
- Meet the Policy Team
- Education Policy
- Policy Briefings
-
Policy Groups
- Policy Groups
- FE White Paper Group
- Academic and Sixth Form Policy Group
- Apprenticeships Policy Group
- Curriculum Reform Policy Group
- Cities and Towns Policy Group
- Employment Policy Group
- English and Maths Policy Group
- Finance and Sustainability Policy Group
- HE Policy Group
- HR Policy Group
- Mental Health Policy Group
- Quality and Accountability Policy Group
- SEND Delivery Policy Group
- SEND Special Interest Group
- Teaching, Learning and Assessment Policy Group
- Technology Special Interest Group
- AoC International Special Interest Group
- AoC WorldSkills Special Interest Group
- Policy, Submissions & Publications
- Policy Papers
- Research Unit
- News, Campaigns & Parliament
- Home
- News, Campaigns & Parliament
- AoC Newsroom
- IFS annual education spending report - AoC responds
IFS annual education spending report - AoC responds
23rd September 2019
Today the Institute for Fiscal Studies released a report on annual spending on education in England, providing a detailed analysis of each stage of education. In response to the IFS report, Chief Executive of AoC, David Hughes said:
"Today's report from the Institute for Fiscal Studies shows the reality of a decade of cuts to colleges. The consequences of the decline in spending and real term freezes has meant fewer adult learners, squeezed budgets and lack of resource to provide the skills the country needs.
While the Chancellor's recent spending announcement of £400 million for sixth forms and colleges was welcome and a further £100 million for teacher's pensions a step in the right direction it must be followed by long-term investment to reverse ten years of continuous cuts and reform. Only this kind of investment will give thousands of people the opportunities they deserve."
You can read the full IFS report here.
AoC's Deputy Chief Executive, Julian Gravatt has summarised the report here.