From the publication of an independent report into the sector, to the new Labour Government’s plans for longer-term funding, change may be on the horizon for the UK’s university spinout sector. We explore whether this will help to spread investment and opportunity more evenly for spinouts outside the South East.
During his first King’s Speech on behalf of the new Labour Government, King Charles III reiterated the party’s manifesto pledges to deliver economic stability across all regions of the UK.
“Securing economic growth will be a fundamental mission,” the King said in the House of Commons on Wednesday 17 July. “My Government will seek a new partnership with both business and working people and help the country move on from the recent cost of living challenges by prioritising wealth creation for all communities.”
The emphasis on wealth creation and opportunity “in all nations and regions” may well be welcome to the UK’s university spinout sector, where investment and resource has traditionally centred on the South East, particularly the ‘Golden Triangle’ of Oxford, Cambridge, and London.
According to Beauhurst’s Spotlight on Spinouts 2023, only the University of Oxford, the University of Cambridge, and Imperial College London have each created more than 100 spinouts between 2011 and January 2023, with 205, 145, and 108 spinouts originating from these institutions respectively.
This disparity is also mirrored in the levels of funding and investment, with the Independent Review of University Spin-Out Companies highlighting that spinouts from universities in the South-East, London, and the East of England raised 74.5% of spinout investment in 2021/22, compared to just 10% in regions across England, Wales, and Northern Ireland combined.
“Part of this South-East bias can be explained by the distribution of research universities and funding across the UK,” the report says. “However, the distribution of investment is more unequal than research funding, with stakeholders outside the South-East reporting difficulties in reaching investors.”
Useful recommendations or one-size-fits-all?
Clearly, there is a significant amount of untapped potential in the UK’s spinout sector. This is a shame, given that many spinouts become successful vehicles for commercialising highly innovative research and development in the UK.
The UK’s university spinout sector as a whole is also one of the world’s most successful, coming second only to the US in terms of spinout investment. Imagine what could be achieved if universities and research institutions outside of the Golden Triangle were given the same level of investment and professional support as their peers in the South-East.
Several reports have been published, both by the Government and by industry professionals, in an effort to remedy this disparity.
The aforementioned Independent Review, for example, provides 11 recommendations for how the sector can build greater resilience and more consistent streams of funding, without relying on a select group of providers based solely in London. It also identifies case studies of how this is being achieved, drawing on success stories from across the UK, the US, and Europe.