City of London schools to receive less money per pupil this year

Children arrive at Manor Park School and Nursery in Knutsford, Cheshire, as pupils in England return to school for the first time in two months as part of the first stage of lockdown easing. Picture date: Monday March 8, 2021.Children arrive at Manor Park School and Nursery in Knutsford, Cheshire, as pupils in England return to school for the first time in two months as part of the first stage of lockdown easing. Picture date: Monday March 8, 2021.
Children arrive at Manor Park School and Nursery in Knutsford, Cheshire, as pupils in England return to school for the first time in two months as part of the first stage of lockdown easing. Picture date: Monday March 8, 2021.
Schools in the City of London will get less money for their pupils in this academic year, new figures show.

Schools in the City of London will get less money for their pupils in this academic year, new figures show.

Experts have warned many schools in England will be left short of funds as the education system's budget increase has not kept up with inflation.

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Department for Education figures show City of London schools will have an average budget of £7,176 per pupil in the new 2023-24 academic year – a decrease of 1.2% from £7,263 the previous year.

Inflation stood at 6.3% in the 12 months to August. The Association of School and College Leaders expressed concerns the “financial situation will continue to be extremely challenging.”

Julia Harnden, funding specialist at the ASCL, said: “While school funding will increase by around 6.8% in 2023-24, this is against a background of very high inflation – which peaked at 11.1% last October on the Consumer Price Index measure – and cuts to real-term per-pupil funding of 9% between 2010 and 2019.”

Budgets varied widely across England, with schools in inner London having the most money allocated per child – £6,559.

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Joe Hallgarten, CEO of The Centre for Education and Youth: “While many regional disparities in school spending need exploring and addressing, it is more urgent to ensure that those schools whose pupils face multiple disadvantages including poverty are provided with greater resources to recruit the best teachers and offer other support for their young people.”

In City of London, schools will have a total budget of £3 million. Of this, £137,000 is allocated to special education needs support, which includes services for visual, hearing and physical impairment, specific learning difficulties such as speech, language and communication, as well as severe learning difficulties and autism.

The planned expenditure on SEND services for schools in England has increased by 5.9% to £588 million this academic year.

Mr Hallgarten said: “Although local authority spending on SEND and inclusion is rising, resources are simply not keeping up with the growth in need and demand.

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“Our whole system for supporting pupils with SEND and those who are at risk of exclusion needs serious, short- and long-term reform.”

A Department for Education spokesperson said: “School funding in England will be at its highest level in history reaching over £59.6 billion next year, as measured by the IFS.”