Wednesday 28 June 2023

UTAS' 2022 Financials: Is UTAS still on track?

 (This is a note prepared for the Legislative Council's Inquiry into the Provisions of the University of Tasmania Act 1992)

Introduction

The recent tabling of UTAS’ 2022 Annual Report is an opportune time to have a close look at UTAS’ current situation.

Rather than just a snapshot of one year’s financials, a few past years will provide a better basis to form a view of how UTAS has arrived at where it is now, and what this means for the future.

The following note is based on UTAS’ financial statements since 2015. It is not a management accounting exercise looking at costs, revenues and student numbers etc, for that is outside the Committee’s Terms of Reference, rather an explanation of UTAS’ overall financial situation.

Executive summary

UTAS’ net profits are very volatile.

Stripping away capital grants and investment income however leaves a more sedate picture.

Unfortunately, all that’s left are losses, losses from the core activities of teaching and research, and losses caused by a relentless pattern of what UTAS describes as restructuring costs.  

It’s not so much that UTAS’s buildings may no longer be suitable, but its current financial model is not fit for purpose.

The gobsmacking reality which UTAS has kept hidden, is that deficits from core activities have been funded by investment income, which inevitably will fall as investments are redeemed to fund the Hobart CDB move.

If as UTAS has suggested, the prize at the end of the day is only $200 million once the Sandy Bay assets are monetised (as consultants term it) and the development costs in the Hobart CDB paid for, how will deficits from UTAS’ core activities be funded?