The University of Adelaide is in the midst of its greatest crisis since it was founded in 1874.
Republic Resumes will run a campaign mid September to help prospective graduates find work.
In the email to students last month, Vice Chancellor Høj announced that unless drastic cost-saving measures were taken, the university would face an annual deficit of $47 million by 2023.
This is due to declining local enrolments and the downturn of the international student market.
The VC said in a spurious statement that the proposed measures were ‘unlikely to impact materially on [students’] current studies’.
He flagged that that the bulk of savings would come from more job cuts.
The University is now considering:
- Merging five faculties into three (job cuts)
- Exploring efficiencies in administrative services (job cuts)
- Rationalising underperforming programs and courses (slashing courses)
- A review of the academic workforce and revenue generation (job cuts)
- Identifying and pursuing new sources of revenue (R&D and government grants)
- A greater drive in philanthropy (hard for a publicly funded uni).
Further regressive steps flagged by the executive are:
- Slashing staff leave loading
- Cutting pay by a minimum 3.5%
- Postponing scheduled pay rises of 1.5%