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'Gang of four' run away with research lead

Published on
January 2, 2004
Last updated
May 22, 2015

A 鈥済ang of four鈥 super-elite UK universities is exerting an ever-tightening stranglehold on research, according to an exclusive analysis for The THES .

Imperial College London tops the group with a total research income of 拢153 million in 2001-02. It is followed by the universities of Oxford and Cambridge, and University College London, each earning about 拢150 million. The next nearest competitor is King鈥檚 College London, which had just 60 per cent of the amount earned by Imperial.

The total research income for the top four institutions exceeded 拢600 million in 2001-02, and amounts to a quarter of that earned by all higher education institutions, according to analysis by Leeds-based company Evidence.

The analysis reveals that the government鈥檚 policy of further concentrating research funding to create a small tier of universities with the muscle to take on the best from overseas is already being realised.

A spokesperson for Cambridge said: 鈥淲e welcome research concentration because it is the only way we can compete internationally.鈥

While the likes of Imperial are big fish in the UK pond, they are minnows compared with the leading US institution, Johns Hopkins University, which boasted just under $1 billion (拢566 million) in 2001.

The UK鈥檚 big four would scrape into the top 40 research-rich US institutions. And, in terms of concentration, there are similarities to the US, where just seven institutions rake in more than $500 million (拢280 million) each, significantly more than their nearest rivals.

The UK figures, based on data held by the Higher Education Statistics Agency, show that national spend on university research grew 43 per cent over the past five years and by more than 10 per cent in 2001-02, the last year for which figures were available.

Concentration is so great in the sciences that Russell Group institutions, including the big four, claim so much of the spoils that new universities are in effect relegated to competing for research money in social sciences and the arts.

The company has analysed each university鈥檚 research income for the years to July 31 2002. The research totals include money from research councils, other public bodies, industry, charity, European Union and other overseas sources.

Jonathan Adams, founder of Evidence, said: 鈥淚mperial has got its act together, and it鈥檚 delivering a heck of a lot. One of the things that is clear is the breakaway of the big four. By the time that you get down to the group below it, the individual incomes are half the size.鈥

All the top ten derive a substantial proportion of their income from their medical schools. The leading four have also invested in research infrastructure for many decades, attracting large and prestigious departments that then lever more cash from research sponsors.

Concentration becomes more apparent when research income is broken down by subject. In areas such as medicine, biological science, physical science and engineering, most universities, particularly new universities, barely get a look in.

Institutions with large medical schools dominate the most lucrative category of clinical medicine and dentistry. UCL tops this table with 拢80 million, 11 per cent of the national research spend in these subjects. The five institutions with the most research income in this area share almost half the national spend.

Only in new areas such as social sciences and the arts do other institutions feature. In social sciences, the London School of Economics tops the table, with 拢11 million, 6 per cent of the national research spend on social science.

In the visual and performing arts, the table is led by the London Institute with 拢954,000, some 6.5 per cent of the national spend on the visual and performing arts. It is followed by the Royal College of Art, the universities of Leeds and Wales, Aberystwyth, and Royal Holloway, University of London.

TOP-TEN RESEARCH-RICH INSTITUTIONS  Institution Research income
(millions) Cumulative percentage 
of total Five-year growth  Imperial College London 拢153 6.5% 28%  University of Oxford 拢150 13% 31%  University of Cambridge 拢149 19% 49%  University College London 拢148 25% 26%  King鈥檚 College London 拢91.4 29% 18%  University of Edinburgh 拢87.8 33% 48%  University of Manchester 拢77.1 36% 44%  University of Glasgow 拢76.4 40% 58%  University of Leeds 拢71.1 43% 46%  University of Southampton 拢70.4 45% 53%
Source: Evidence


TOP FIVE RICHEST RESEARCH INSTITUTIONS BY SUBJECT AREA

Clinical medicine and dentistry  Institution Research income
(millions) Cumulative percentage 
of total Five-year growth

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 University College London

拢80

11%

22%

 Imperial College London

拢78

22%

32%

 University of Oxford

拢61

31%

34%

 King鈥檚 College London

拢58

39%

12%

 University of Cambridge

拢44

46%

71%

Biological sciences  Institution Research income
(millions) Cumulative percentage 
of total Five-year growth

 University of Cambridge

拢29

7.0%

42%

 University of Oxford

14%

15%

 Imperial College London

拢26

20%

49%

 University of Edinburgh

拢25

26%

45%

 University of Glasgow

拢24

32%

56%

Physical sciences and mathematics  Institution Research income
(millions) Cumulative percentage 
of total Five-year growth

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 University of Cambridge

拢36

8.9%

35%

 University of Southampton

拢23

14%

91%

 University of Oxford

拢22

20%

24%

 Imperial College London

拢22

25%

15%

 University College London

拢19

30%

41%

Engineering and technology  Institution Research income
(millions) Cumulative percentage 
of total Five-year growth

 Imperial College London

拢26

6.8%

13%

 University of Cambridge

拢23

13%

60%

 University of Southampton

拢21

18%

47%

 University of Nottingham

拢17

22%

65%

 University of Sheffield

拢17

%

30%

Subjects allied to medicine and health  Institution Research income
(millions) Cumulative percentage 
of total Five-year growth

 University College London

拢23

12%

64%

 King鈥檚 College London

拢16

21%

41%

 University of Oxford

拢14

28%

11%

 University of Cambridge

拢8.3

32%

25%

 University of Liverpool

拢7.1

36%

17%

Social sciences  Institution Research income
(millions) Cumulative percentage 
of total Five-year growth

 London School of
 Economics

拢11

6.0%

38%

 University of Oxford

拢7.3

9.8%

132%

 University of Warwick

拢7.2

14%

7%

 University of York

拢6.9

17%

31%

 University of Durham

拢6.3

21%

70%

Humanities  Institution Research income
(millions) Cumulative percentage 
of total Five-year growth

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 University of Glasgow

拢3.7

8.1%

295%

 University of Oxford

拢3.6

16%

164%

 University of Cambridge

拢2.6

22%

33%

 University of Birmingham

拢2.0

26%

31%

 University of Sheffield

拢1.9

30%

91%

Visual and performing arts  Institution Research income
(millions) Cumulative percentage 
of total Five-year growth

 London Institute

拢954,000

9.4%

105%

 Royal College of Art

拢940,000

18%

5%

 University of Leeds

拢877,000

%

55%

 University of Wales, Aberystwyth

拢507,000

32%

77%

 Royal Holloway, University
 of London

拢418,000

37%

243%

Source: Evidence

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