NEXT year’s Scottish budget needs to deliver a “reliable, sustainable funding settlement” for universities to help with the country’s recovery from Covid-19, a representative body for the sector has said.

Universities Scotland said this week’s UK Government Spending Review failed to set out clearly how much money will be available for higher education north of the border via either additional money announced for research or the Shared Prosperity Fund.

With the end of the Brexit transition period also looming at the end of December, the organisation stressed the 2021-22 Scottish budget will be “critical” to higher education.

Professor Gerry McCormac, the convener of Universities Scotland and principal of the University of Stirling, said the draft budget – which will be unveiled by Finance Secretary Kate Forbes early next year – must make “rapid progress towards sustainable funding of every Scottish-domiciled student”.

He added: “If that cannot be achieved in one leap, we look at least for complete reversal of the £750 per student real-terms erosion in funding since 2014-15.”

The Scottish Funding Council (SFC) has already estimated the higher education sector will face an overall deficit of £176 million in 2020- 21.

It has estimated the public funding of university teaching in 2018-19 was £157 million below the full cost of providing this – with university research only funded at 80% of cost.

Prof McCormac stressed “Scotland’s recovery from the Covid-19 pandemic will be education-led”.

He said: “We owe it to our young people to provide maximum support and ensure they have the best educational experience possible in the years ahead.

“To do this, universities need to recover from the financial shock and receive a reliable, sustainable funding settlement from the Scottish Government.

“We are ambitious for Scotland and want to fully contribute to the recovery but the next budget from the Scottish Government will be critical in terms of addressing the major gaps in higher education funding.”

Prof McCormac said it is “regrettable that with only days to go” until the the full impact of Brexit is felt when the transition period ends, universities “still have no clarity over our future research relationship with the EU, nor do we know if we will be members of the Erasmus student mobility scheme”.

He added: “Whilst we welcome the commitment that all EU funds will be covered, the lack of detail around the Shared Prosperity Fund is of concern.

“The value of university research has never been more evident than during this pandemic.

“We need further progress towards research being funded at full cost so that Scottish universities can continue the world-leading research and innovation that will build a sustainable recovery.”

He added: “As we move out of the deep crisis caused by the global pandemic, we need to rebuild our capability to create more jobs, enhance social services, restore living standards and build an even more inclusive society.

“Investment in universities does that.”