Sixty per cent of UK higher education staff who took part in a new University and College Union survey said they were likely to leave the sector within the next five years.
The number rose even higher among postgraduate students, 81 per cent of whom said they were likely to look for work elsewhere because of deteriorating pay and working conditions.
Jo Grady, the union’s general secretary, said the “stark” findings were accompanied by “harrowing” testimonies from staff, many of whom she described as “not at breaking point but already broken”.
UCU say its report, based on a survey of nearly 7,000 members and titled UK higher education: a workforce in crisis, should “sound the alarm” about the future of the sector and warned of a staff exodus in the coming years.
The union has called for a parliamentary inquiry and wants the House of Commons Education Select Committee to look into the morale and well-being of staff in higher education and the impact of policies on pensions, pay and working conditions.
Dr Grady said members overwhelmingly blamed the low morale on vice-chancellors, who she accused of not listening to staff concerns around high workloads, insecure contracts and low pay.
The survey was conducted at the end of February amid industrial action over cuts to pensions provided via the Universities Superannuation Scheme, which will cut thousands of pounds annually from employees’ guaranteed retirement benefits. Dr Grady said she expected discontent but until this point had not fully understood the sheer level of unhappiness in the sector, particularly among those just starting out in their careers.
She said it was a “damning indictment of the toxic culture” in universities that those who should be the most enthusiastic, having just secured their first positions in the sector, were planning to leave “before they’ve got their feet under the table”.
The survey also found that of respondents aged over 60, 71 per cent said they were likely to leave due to cuts to their pensions.
“They are simultaneously driving away people towards the end and beginning of their career. Without action this could cut the legs from the entire higher education sector,” Dr Grady said.
UCU also warned that discontent among university staff poses a risk to the UK’s reputation as an international leader in research, as three in four researchers polled are considering leaving.
Dr Grady warned that this group tended to be younger, more mobile and have fewer roots in the UK so are therefore happy to leave the country in search of work overseas.
Other findings from the survey included 88 per cent of respondents saying they were not optimistic or not at all optimistic about the future of higher education in the UK and 57 per cent of respondents saying they are unhappy or very unhappy about spending the remainder of their career in the sector.
Dr Grady admitted that it would take a long time to restore trust among disillusioned academics but said some of the issues being experienced such as high workloads and casual contracts could be “remedied quite easily”.
“Some of the problems could be easily fixed if there was the will to do it amongst the people who lead institutions rather than them acting so defensively and as if things can never change,” she added.
Universities UK said that the “excellence of our staff is central to UK universities’ global reputation for teaching and research”.
“We want UCU and employers to work closely and positively together on issues of common interest to ensure that our highly respected university sector offers a high quality and positive experience for both students and staff,” the organisation said.
“UUK looks forward to assisting the work of Ucea [the Universities and Colleges Employers Association], UCU and individual universities to ensure higher education institutions offer supportive working environments in which staff can thrive, alongside attractive renumeration and benefits.”
Raj Jethwa, Ucea’s chief executive, said it was “time for UCU to consider their members by progressing the consistent offers that have been made by employers” on issues such as workload and insecure contracts.
“The health, safety and well-being of staff and students is of paramount importance to all in HE and there are good examples where employers and unions have worked together in this crucial area,” Mr Jethwa said.