Westminster Higher Education Forum

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Next steps for UK universities and their local economies

policy developments - national aims, local needs & institutional priorities - local skills planning & Improvement Plans - regional partnerships & community engagement - industrial strategy alignment & sector priorities - innovation & spin-outs

Morning, Friday, 8th May 2026

Online


This conference will consider next steps for the role of universities in contributing to local economic growth and productivity, and the development of place-based skills systems in the UK.


Those attending will explore strategies that can enable HEIs to align their educational, research, and civic missions with national policy, and local and labour market needs - while also taking forward other institutional priorities, and maximising practical impact for local communities and employers.


Policy, funding HEI responsibilities & implementation strategies
The conference will bring stakeholders and policymakers together to examine implications of the 2025 Post-16 Education and Skills White Paper, which set out expectations for HEIs to increase their engagement with Local Skills Improvement Plans and support their implementation, alongside increasing collaboration with local and combined authorities and FE colleges, with the aim of better meeting skills needs of local employers.


As well as the white paper, implications of wider policy will be considered, including commitments in the 2025 Autumn Budget of £9bn in funding for the Industrial Strategy priority sectors and £500m for the Mayoral Revolving Growth Fund, as well as launch of the AI Strategy for UK Research and Innovation with £1.6bn of targeted funding for AI research, infrastructure, and skills development.


We expect discussion to focus on approaches for universities in balancing national funding priorities with local needs, integrating new industrial priorities into curricula, and seeking to ensure investment in regional networks delivers measurable skills and economic outcomes.


The agenda also looks at the way forward for the higher education sector in working with partners to deliver high-quality education and training aligned with national and regional industrial priorities, fostering innovation, and supporting the economic resilience of both the local areas in which universities operate and the institutions themselves, including attracting investment, retaining talent, and enhancing regional productivity.


Local skills planning, partnerships & HE engagement with Local Skills Improvement Plans
Sessions will discuss key steps and practical considerations for implementing the white paper’s proposals on local skills planning, including the integration of Local Skills Improvement Plans into higher education planning and alignment of provision with local workforce needs and priority sectors. Delegates will assess emerging practice for building effective partnerships between universities, further education providers, combined and local authorities and employers - including small and medium-sized enterprises - to address skills gaps and strengthen pathways into skilled employment.


Further discussion will look at engagement with initiatives such as the Youth Guarantee and the Growth and Skills Levy, and how curricula, work-based learning, and careers support can be structured to retain the flexibility needed to respond to changing labour market conditions and regional economic priorities. Attendees will discuss the role of universities in supporting devolved skills systems, regional workforce alignment, and practical routes through which SMEs and local employers can access graduate talent and specialist expertise.


Collaboration, innovation & commercialisation
Options for improving the design of shared services and joint programmes will be considered, including circumstances in which closer institutional collaboration or new partnership models may help strengthen regional higher education and innovation capacity in line with collaboration and specialisation priorities. Discussion will also consider the potential impact of the English Devolution and Community Empowerment Bill on partnerships and co-investment between anchor institutions and combined authorities, alongside early impact of the Mayoral Revolving Growth Fund.


Further discussion will look at the development of higher education institutions as local anchors for research, innovation and knowledge exchange - including through spin-outs, start-ups and research commercialisation - and frameworks for support mechanisms such as the Higher Education Innovation Fund, Local Innovation Partnerships Fund and Strategic Priorities Grants. Attendees will consider how these mechanisms can best be used so as to balance regional development objectives with institutional autonomy, local responsiveness and financial sustainability, while supporting place-based innovation, cluster development and alignment with Industrial Strategy priorities.


The role of regional innovation hubs will be considered, including the development of innovation clusters supporting Industrial Strategy priority sectors. Delegates will examine approaches for maximising the local economic contribution of universities within existing and emerging funding frameworks, while maintaining flexibility for institutions to pursue diverse research and innovation priorities.


Widening access
The agenda will also look at priorities for widening participation and addressing higher education cold spots. Areas for discussion include potential implications of domestic tuition fee changes for the financial sustainability of institutions’ regional provision, and equity of access in underserved areas.


Attendees will consider approaches to widening reach, such as contextual admissions, targeted outreach and support for under-represented learners. Discussion will also examine ways to ensure parity and effective pathways between academic and technical routes - including V Levels, T Levels and apprenticeships - for adult learners, mid-career reskilling and those who do not fit traditional entry points into higher education and further study.


Monitoring & accountability
Further discussion will consider regulatory, legal and accountability frameworks for regional partnerships, including quality assurance, use of data, and metrics for assessing economic and social outcomes. Delegates will consider how universities can contribute to a coherent local skills and innovation offer that benefits learners, employers and communities, while recognising the differing missions of institutions and regional contexts.


All delegates will be able to contribute to the output of the conference, which will be shared with parliamentary, ministerial, departmental and regulatory offices, and more widely. This includes the full proceedings and additional articles submitted by delegates. As well as key stakeholders, those already due to attend include officials from the Department for Science, Innovation and Technology; Department for Business and Trade; Department for the Economy, NI; Intellectual Property Office; and Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office.



Keynote Speakers

Richard Brabner

Visiting Professor, Civic Engagement, Newcastle University; and former Director, UUP Foundation

Greg Wade

Head, Innovation Policy, Universities UK