A lack of government oversight has left the student finance system
open to exploitation from systemic and organised fraud and abuse.
In a report published today, the Public Accounts Committee (PAC)
warns of a lack of oversight of ‘franchised providers' –
institutions providing courses on behalf of universities as part of
a commercial partnership, or franchise. In 2022/23, detected fraud
involving franchised providers totalled £2.2 million, 53% of the
£4.1 million fraud...Request free trial
A lack of government oversight has left the student finance
system open to exploitation from systemic and organised fraud and
abuse. In a report published today, the Public Accounts Committee
(PAC) warns of a lack of oversight of ‘franchised providers' –
institutions providing courses on behalf of universities as part
of a commercial partnership, or franchise.
In 2022/23, detected fraud involving franchised providers
totalled £2.2 million, 53% of the £4.1 million fraud identified
by the Student Loans Company (SLC). Two-thirds of franchised
providers are not registered with the Office for Students (OfS),
which sets conditions for registered institutions designed to
protect students, assure quality, and ensure good governance. The
PAC's inquiry found that the responsibility to tackle fraud and
abuse of student funding is not fully embedded in ways of working
at the OfS, SLC, and the Department for Education.
The growing use of franchised providers presents risks to for
students. Some higher education providers rely on franchising
growing student numbers to remain financially viable. Numbers of
students at franchised providers more than doubled between
2018/19 and 2021/22, to 4.7% of all students, The OfS told the
PAC's inquiry that it was shocked by the high amount of tuition
fees retained by providers using franchisees (up to 30% in some
cases). This raises quality concerns, as if a university takes a
fee percentage, and a franchisee generates a profit, the amount
spent on students is reduced.
The report further finds that a lack of transparency means
students do not have the information they need to make
well-informed decisions about their studies. Some franchised
providers have course completion rates as low as 60%, compared to
90% across the higher education sector, but OfS does not publish
data in a way that distinguishes between lead and franchised
providers. Some students may even be unaware that they are at a
franchised provider, as well as how much of their tuition fees a
franchisee will receive, or which of the main institutions'
services they can use, such as welfare services.
Sir Geoffrey Clifton-Brown MP, Deputy Chair of the
Committee, said: “A back door into the student loan
system for organised fraudsters has been left hanging wide open
here by the lack of oversight by government. Fraud involving
franchised providers now makes up a little over half of all fraud
identified by the Student Loans Company. Our Committee's scrutiny
has now long established that tackling fraud cannot be left to
the experts, but the fight needs to be prioritised and led from
the top.
“These issues must be addressed with some urgency, as the use of
franchised providers only looks set to grow. Indeed, concerningly
the franchising out of education seems to be viewed by some
providers as a way of underpinning their finances. The risk to
the taxpayer from unchecked fraud is clear, but the systemic
risks to the quality of education provided to students must also
be taken in hand. Shockingly, up to 30% is retained from tuition
fees by lead providers under the franchise system without
students necessarily knowing it's happening. We hope the
recommendations in our report help the Government ensure
transparency and robust oversight of the whole sector.”
Conclusions and recommendations
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Lack of transparency about student outcomes, teaching
quality and arrangements with franchised providers does not
give students the information they need to make well-informed
decisions. Some students may be unaware they are at a
franchised provider, how much of their tuition fees the
franchised provider receives, or of the lead provider services
they can use, such as welfare services or the student union.
Provider performance varies with, for example, course
completion rates averaging just over 80% for franchised
providers, with some as low as 60%, compared to 90% across the
higher education sector. However, OfS does not publish data in
a way that distinguishes between lead and franchised providers.
Recommendation 1a): DfE should set out requirements for
higher education providers to publish summaries of their
franchise agreements, including the proportion of funding they
retain and for what purpose, so students know what this means for
them.
b): Developing information already available, OfS should
publish student outcome data for individual franchised providers.
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To remain financially viable, some providers may be
incentivised to increase student numbers through franchising,
which creates risks for students and taxpayers. In
2022, the Committee highlighted the risk of providers being
financially vulnerable. OfS analysis, published in May 2023,
suggests some rely on increases in student numbers to remain
viable. Some providers have used franchising to increase their
student numbers, depending on this income. A small number of
franchised providers have expanded very rapidly. The C&AG's
report explained that lead providers could be taking between
12.5% and 30% of tuition fees paid in respect of students at
their franchised providers. OfS cannot access these contracts,
but expressed shock at the figures, and voiced concerns about
the impact this might have on teaching quality. Some providers
use recruitment agents to increase student numbers. Because
these recruitment practices are unregulated, agents may not
make it clear what students get for their money, and there are
incentives to recruit student numbers rather than ensuring
students enrol on the most suitable courses. Universities UK
has developed a quality framework, that it has now committed to
review and update as needed.
Recommendation 2a): Within the next 12 months, OfS should
publish a more systematic overview for the higher education
sector sharing its insights on where providers have adapted their
delivery models, and the emerging risks providers then need to
manage.
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b) OfS should also set out what proportion of tuition
fees lead providers could be seen as reasonably retaining in
relation to the student services they remain responsible for,
and consider these financial arrangements in the scope of any
investigations it carries out into the quality of franchised
provision.
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The current regulatory system does not ensure
sufficient oversight over franchised providers. OfS
publishes conditions that registered providers must meet, and
continue to meet. These are designed to protect students,
assure quality, and ensure good governance. But only lead
providers need to be registered with OfS, and two-thirds of
franchised providers are unregistered. A few lead providers
became franchisees after having been refused registration or
withdrawing from the process, raising concerns about whether
they would meet the conditions. Teaching quality and welfare
for students at franchised providers remain the responsibility
of lead providers, but we are not convinced that all providers
fulfil these responsibilities equally well. DfE and OfS insist
that they are reiterating to lead providers their
responsibilities for franchisees, and Universities UK is
developing a new framework to encourage improvements and
consistency. Until recently, OfS has not explicitly considered
franchise agreements, or the robustness of lead providers'
oversight of franchisees, when assessing compliance with
registration conditions. It will now consider whether a
provider has a franchise arrangement when selecting providers
for review. DfE says it is actively considering whether
franchised providers should be registered, and that it hopes to
decide before summer this year.
Recommendation 3: DfE should set out what it will do to
strengthen direct and indirect oversight of franchised providers
to ensure they meet the standards expected for an organisation
receiving taxpayers' money. This could include requiring all
providers to register with the OfS in some form or strengthening
the powers of OfS and SLC where they have concerns.
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DfE, OfS and SLC recognise they have a shared
responsibility to tackle fraud and abuse of student funding
although this is not yet fully embedded in their ways of
working. In our July 2023 report on tackling fraud and
corruption across government, we concluded that tackling fraud
cannot be left to counter-fraud technical experts. Senior
officials across government must demonstrate leadership, set
the tone, and build in preventative approaches. DfE, OfS and
SLC acknowledge that they missed an opportunity to intervene
early for one of the case studies cited in the C&AG's
report. With better information sharing and awareness of the
risks, DfE might have acted differently. DfE, OfS and SLC now
meet regularly in a newly created group to share intelligence
and consider risk.
Recommendation 4: DfE, OfS and SLC should agree a shared
risk culture and risk appetite, supported by a formal reporting
framework (including targets for fraud prevention and reduction),
and write this into each organisation's risk register.
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Despite the complex regulatory system, roles and
responsibilities for fraud prevention, detection and
intervention are undefined. The system for paying loan
monies and overseeing providers is complicated, involving
multiple bodies. The Government Internal Audit Agency (GIAA)
and C&AG both found that there were gaps between DfE, OfS
and SLC responsibilities, that the boundaries between bodies
were unclear, and that bodies had different interpretations
about where the boundaries lay. OfS has a general
responsibility for protecting public funds, but no explicit
responsibility in respect of student loan fraud. SLC says that
it has good information to tackle individual level fraud, which
has been enhanced by membership of the National Economic Crime,
but acknowledges that it has less knowledge, and can intervene
less, with providers. SLC also has limited power to suspend
payments, even where fraud suspected, without clear direction
from DfE.
Recommendation 5: DfE, OfS, SLC's roles and
responsibilities should be clearly articulated and written into
organisational system statements and operating protocols.
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Although SLC uses data on attendance to show student's
course engagement, and therefore pay loans, there remains no
agreed definition of what constitutes attendance or
engagement. SLC requires providers to confirm that
students are attending their courses before it will make
tuition fee and maintenance payments. However, DfE, SLC, OfS
and providers have no commonly agreed definition of what
constitutes student attendance or engagement, or how it should
be evidenced. The NAO recommended that DfE should develop
guidance for providers explaining what constitutes meaningful
student engagement and how it expects providers to self-assure
data. Higher education relies heavily on self-directed
learning, and DfE recognises that attendance might mean
different things, at different institutions or for different
courses. Universities UK has nonetheless recognised the need to
revisit the definition of attendance and engagement, and
recommended DfE engage with the sector to take this forward.
DfE accepts the need to develop guidance, and hopes this will
be introduced before summer this year.
Recommendation 6: DfE should work quickly to clarify what
constitutes student attendance and meaningful engagement with
courses, ensuring sufficient engagement with providers, and
publish guidance as soon as possible.
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