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Title: FULL ECONOMIC COSTING fEC FOR SUSTAINABILITY


1
FULL ECONOMIC COSTING (fEC) FOR SUSTAINABILITY
  • Selby Knox
  • Heads of Department Forum
  • 20 May 2004

2
BACKGROUND
  • 1998 CSR additional funds for HE but
    transparent costing required
  • JCPSG established Transparent Approach to
    Costing (TRAC), a light-touch methodology,
    implemented 1999-2004
  • TRAC showed research under-funded when fEC
    calculated and a particular problem with
    infrastructure
  • Treasury and OST commissioned infrastructure
    reviews
  • showed 8 billion investment backlog
  • and no possibility of catching up while research
    funded below cost

3
ADDITIONAL FUNDS FOR RESEARCH IN 2002 CSR
  • 500 million p.a. for capital (SRIF2) from
    2004-05 (90 funded)
  • 244 million p.a. for QR from 2005-06
  • 120 million p.a. to enhance level (not volume)
    of Research Council grants from 2005-06

4
BUT A REQUIREMENT INTRODUCE fEC AND MOVE TO
SUSTAINABILITY
  • OST 2002 HEIs have a responsibility for
    ensuring the long term sustainability of their
    research enterprise
  • CSR 2002 The Government will expect
    universities to manage their activities in a
    sustainable way
  • HEFCE Financial Memorandum 2003 HEIs required to
    identify and recover the fEC of their activities
    and integrate transparent costing and pricing
    into decision-making processes
  • In our interests - must know the fEC of our
    activities, price accordingly and change the low
    price culture. All US universities price their
    research on an fEC basis.

5
WHAT IS SUSTAINABILITY?
  • JCPSG Guidance Manual An institution is being
    managed on a sustainable basis if it is
    recovering its full economic costs across its
    activities as a whole, and is investing in its
    infrastructure (physical and human) at a rate
    adequate to maintain its future productive
    capacity.
  • Professor David Westbury, chair of JCPSG
    Resources must be identified to meet the full
    costs in the long run. It is no longer
    sufficient simply to balance the books.
  • Not a new concept at Bristol. A long term
    policy. The surplus! The strategic investment
    fund.

6
SUSTAINABILITY ACHIEVED BY
  • Establishing and recognising the fEC of
    activities
  • Securing better prices
  • Improving project management and cost recovery
  • Investing in the institutional infrastructure
  • Managing activity strategically
  • increased emphasis on management of research and
    teaching portfolios

7
THE JCPSG STUDY
  • JCPSG and JM Consulting commissioned by OST/HEFCE
    to extend TRAC to cost research projects on an
    fEC basis
  • Tested methods with 10 university pilots
  • Identified methodology that satisfies Research
    Councils
  • Issued Guidance Manual February 2004

8
TIMETABLE FOR ACCESSING THE RESEARCH COUNCILS
120 MILLION
  • Autumn 2004
  • New forms and instructions from Research
    Councils. 
  • April 2005
  • First 120 million allocated pro rata to
    universities.
  • Bristols share estimated at ca. 4 million in a
    full year, 1.25 million in 2004-05. 
  • September 2005
  • Applications to Research Councils on an fEC
    basis. 
  • April 2006
  • Research Council grants funded on an fEC basis. 

9
NOT JUST A RESEARCH COUNCIL ISSUE
  • From January 2005 can apply to Government
    Departments on an fEC basis.
  • target date for having processes and systems in
    place.
  • Can apply to other funders (industry, charities)
    from then also.
  • So much more than just 4 million p.a. at stake.

10
BUT WILL FUNDERS PAY?
  • Research Councils will pay 60-70 of fEC (rest
    from QR and institutions funds)
  • NHS treated as a Research Council, i.e. 60-70
  • Govt Depts should expect to pay 100 of fEC of
    research commissioned from universities -
    Treasury
  • Charities more likely to pay costs that can be
    identified as direct (staff time, space)
  • Industry pricing is market-based not cost-based
    but introduction of fEC across sector will exert
    upward pressure on pricing and cost recovery
  • Lower volume of better-funded research projects?

11
fEC THE MAIN CHANGES
  • Estimating and charging for academic staff time
  • RA and technical staff direct costs chargeable as
    now
  • Identifying and charging more costs as direct
  • especially estates/space costs
  • direct consumables, equipment and services costs
    etc chargeable as now
  • Smaller residual indirect costs
  • closer to central support service costs
  • Improved verification and audit processes
  • including QA

12
CALCULATING fEC
  • Academic Staff
  • cost calculated on basis of standard working week
    and year and each academics actual salary or
    salary band
  • Estates/Space Costs
  • by January 2005 charge as /FTE academic staff
  • by August 2007 charge as /m2 using at least 4
    space categories
  • Residual Indirect Costs
  • charge as /FTE academic staff
  • not /salary cost as now

13
IMPLICATIONS FOR ACADEMIC STAFF
  • Estimate time on project in actual hours
  • Include time for project management, writing
    papers, dissemination, etc.
  • Exclude time for research student supervision
    unless it is a student funded by the project
  • Keep simple records to verify time
  • e.g. log book of main events, meetings etc.
  • awaiting confirmation from research councils

14
HELP WILL BE AVAILABLE
  • fEC website established this week
  • www.bris.ac.uk/fec
  • contains this presentation
  • Communication and Training
  • termly Heads of Department forums
  • termly training programmes by Staff Development
  • JCPSG advice on communication and training
    strategy released May 2004
  • Costing done by appropriate trained staff using
    effective systems
  • Advice on pricing

15
fEC PROJECT IMPLEMENTATION
  • A complex and demanding project.
  • A variety of new processes and systems required
  • e.g. pre-application estimating, post-application
    cost recording, invoicing, verification
  • requires input from a wide range of academic and
    support service staff. 
  • Must make as straightforward and burden-free as
    possible for all staff.
  • Must operate in a more business-like way
  • but not threaten the conditions that have made us
    successful.

16
PROJECT STRUCTURE
  • Steering Group
  • to oversee project, ensure timely delivery and
    that communications and change are managed
    properly
  • will sit for several years, monthly for first two
  • Project Management Group
  • to make recommendations to Steering Group and to
    coordinate activities of Sub-Groups charged with
    detailed aspects, also meets monthly
  • Sub-Groups
  • 3 so far (staff time, space, costing)
  • 3 to come (pricing, financial info,
    communications)

17
STEERING GROUP MEMBERSHIP
  • Selby Knox PVC(Resources) Designate - Chair
  • Bill Boyd Dean of Science
  • Len Hall Dean of Med Vet Sciences Elect
  • Bob Fowler Dean of Arts Elect
  • Ian Crawford Finance Director
  • Guy Gregory HR Director
  • Sian Thomas Director of RED
  • Alison Allden Director of Information Services
  • Project Manager to be appointed
  • Helen Galbraith Admin support

18
PROJECT MANAGEMENT GROUP MEMBERSHIP
  • Project Manager Chair (Ian Crawford interim)
  • Finance Office (3)
  • RED (2)
  • Estates (1)
  • Information Services (1)
  • Personnel (1)
  • Departmental Manager (1)
  • Academic representation on Sub-Groups
  • 3 nominations requested from each Dean

19
TEACHING
  • We can use the same fEC methods to ensure
  • fees reflect the costs of delivering courses
  • the management of teaching portfolios is
    properly informed.
  • Note that HEFCE is considering introducing a
    cost-based approach to the funding of subjects
    (for 2007-08?).
  • Sustainability relevant here also
  • infrastructure reviews also found history of
    under-investment in teaching facilities
  • needs to be addressed in the new fee-setting era
    with students as demanding customers
  • to attract students to less popular courses
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