Amid all the scepticism swirling around the UK about the value of degrees, a university leader opining that a degree is no longer a 鈥減assport to social mobility鈥 was always going to make headlines.
Just three days into a year during which sector leaders were hoping to refocus the nation鈥檚 attention on the value of universities, Shitij Kapur, vice-chancellor of King鈥檚 College London, that the competition in the UK job market is such that a degree is now more like a 鈥渧isa for social mobility鈥, rather than the 鈥減assport鈥 to it that it used to be.
鈥淪o the simple promise of a good job if you get a university degree has now become conditional on which university you went to, which course you took,鈥 Kapur said.
His comments were debated in newspapers and radio stations across the country, and Kapur was accused by critics on social media of 鈥渇iring the starting gun on sector self-sabotage鈥 and of trying to please his 鈥済overnment masters鈥.
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The debate about the value of degrees has moved on in recent weeks to student loans, with numerous graduates taking to the airwaves to complain that they are impossible to pay off even as they significantly diminish already squeezed incomes. But the wider debate about social mobility continues in the background.
Everyone agrees that social mobility is a good thing. But what does it really mean? How can it best be achieved? And is it really the silver bullet to addressing inequality that its advocates depict it as?
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One metric of social mobility is the number of people from poor backgrounds who end up in professional occupations. And, last year, research by educational charity the Sutton Trust found that one in three graduates from non-graduate families are in the top quintile of earners, compared with one in eight non-graduates from similar backgrounds.
But tthat those from lower socio-economic backgrounds do not benefit as much from educational opportunities as their peers do. found that, despite progress, a child鈥檚 education level 鈥 and, therefore, likelihood of going to university at all 鈥 is still heavily dependent on their parents鈥 background.
There is also a question about what universities contribute to social mobility, over and above prior schooling and innate academic ability. As recruiters of higher proportions of students from non-traditional backgrounds, post-92 universities often describe themselves as doing the 鈥渉eavy lifting鈥 on social mobility within the higher education sector. But Kapur鈥檚 remark on the importance of 鈥渨hich university you went to鈥 seems to cast doubt on that claim.
Graeme Atherton, associate pro vice-chancellor for regional engagement at the University of West London, said a degree has never been a guarantee of social mobility, but he disputed Kapur鈥檚 qualification to speak about social mobility given that he leads an institution that admits fewer non-traditional students than the sector average.
鈥淚f [King鈥檚鈥橾 students are from higher socio-economic backgrounds, they鈥檙e not going to be socially mobile anyway: they鈥檙e going to be socially static,鈥 said Atherton, who is also vice-principal of Ruskin College, the West London-owned Oxford institution that offers accessible adult learning. 鈥淢aybe [Kapur] still thinks social mobility can only be [plausibly claimed] if people go on to do very highly paid occupations, often associated with extra professional qualifications. But the reality is that鈥any students鈥ake progress 鈥 but it may be shorter-range progress.鈥

Kapur noted that the promise of a good job has also become conditional on 鈥渨hich course you took鈥. And John Jerrim, professor of education and social statistics at UCL, agreed that a degree is not a 鈥渟ilver bullet鈥, with opportunities depending heavily on institution, degree choice and level of attainment.
鈥淚f you do something like medicine or economics at a high-status university, then you do tend to go on and get good labour market economic rewards. There鈥檚 good evidence behind that,鈥 he said. 鈥淸But] if you do an arts degree from a less prestigious institution, essentially you don鈥檛 get any return, and you might even get a negative return on your investment.鈥
Indeed, for Jack Britton, a reader of economics at the University of York and a research fellow at the Institute for Fiscal Studies, low graduate earnings are 鈥渕ore of a subject story than a鈥type of] university story鈥.
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Yet the debate about social mobility continues to focus primarily on how many poorer students get into top universities 鈥 most of all, Oxbridge. That is why news that Trinity Hall, Cambridge is targeting recruitment from several elite private schools, reported just a week after Kapur鈥檚 remarks, caused such dismay in some quarters.
The college said its policy was designed to improve the 鈥渜uality鈥 of applicants, amid concern that 鈥渢he crucial task of securing greater fairness in admissions鈥 is unintentionally resulting in 鈥渞everse discrimination鈥 against well-qualified applicants from private schools. But Lee Elliot Major, former chief executive of the Sutton Trust and now professor of social mobility at the University of Exeter, said the college had fallen into the trap of failing to see through 鈥渢he polish and preparation that comes from privilege with natural talent鈥.
Moreover, his view was that 鈥渦niversities should do the harder work of nurturing talent, irrespective of [the student鈥檚] starting point鈥because] this is about levelling the playing field鈥.
The University of Cambridge has also been criticised for dropping its targets for admissions from state schools in 2024 to focus on wider socio-economic factors; last year, the proportion of state school pupils accepted by Cambridge fell by a record amount. Oxford鈥檚 proportion of admissions from state schools also fell sharply last year.
But does the constant handwringing over Oxbridge admissions afford too much focus on two institutions? Britton said the Oxbridge effect on social mobility is certainly true for those who study economics and other more quantitative subjects, but not for all subjects.
鈥淭he [claim] that Oxbridge is just a pure ticket to the top is not really borne out in the data. My suspicion is that a lot of the benefits of going to Oxbridge if you鈥檝e not done a quantitative subject come through other means like meeting rich people,鈥 he said.
Nevertheless, Jon Datta, head of university access and digital at the Sutton Trust, said that the UK鈥檚 highly stratified higher education system is one of the reasons why increasing university participation has not improved social mobility as much as advocates of university expansion had hoped, while the payoff from degrees has fallen.
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鈥淭he strongest labour market returns are concentrated among graduates of the most selective institutions 鈥 where disadvantaged students, of course, remain underrepresented,鈥 he said.

Critics of 鈥渞ip-off degrees鈥 鈥 a phrase trumpeted by the last government 鈥 gleefully demonstrate their claims after graduation, which reveal that graduates of certain degrees earn well below the median national wage. But many argue that five years is far too short a timescale to judge the value of any course.
鈥淟ooking at people in their very early career, it鈥檚 very difficult to say much about what they鈥檙e going to be doing in their late thirties, forties and fifties, which is when the returns to higher education really seem to kick in,鈥 Britton said.
Indeed, are graduate earnings even the right measure of social mobility? Exeter鈥檚 Major said that metric unfairly discriminates against certain types of institutions: 鈥淢any universities will produce graduates that go on to do incredibly valuable jobs in their local communities: teachers, social workers, nurses. Social mobility isn鈥檛 just about a narrow pipeline of catapulting people into high-earning jobs,鈥 he said.
That is why some in social mobility academic circles would prefer to use occupation as the primary measure of progress, rather than income.
Anna Mountford-Zimdars, professor of social justice at Exeter, said the disparity of graduate employment opportunities across the country poses a dilemma for policymakers. Noting that King鈥檚鈥 ability to promote social mobility is boosted by its location within London鈥檚 vast graduate labour market, she continued: 鈥淭he choices and opportunities are just so different if [a graduate lives] in a more rural, coastal, sparsely populated part of the country. So you might not always be serving young people by saying they should go into higher education because then鈥hey might have to move region and be dislocated.鈥
On the other hand, London has by far the UK鈥檚 highest cost of living 鈥 another confounding factor in the social mobility debate. And, more generally, we are seeing an 鈥渦nravelling鈥 of the 鈥渂asic life model鈥 whereby a degree was a passport to a graduate job that would allow its incumbent to start a family and buy a property, according to Major. 鈥淚t鈥檚 challenging the notions of what education is for, so I think many people now are starting to question the role of higher education in their lives.鈥
by the Institute for Fiscal Studies also found that the property price boom has hindered social mobility 鈥 and not just for the poorest. That may be thought to lend weight to UCL鈥檚 Jerrim鈥檚 feeling that the near exclusive focus of the social mobility debate on individuals from disadvantaged backgrounds is shortsighted. For him, there is an argument that more emphasis should be put on pushing those in the middle of the income distribution into the very top social strata.

Jerrim also noted that there is evidence that students 鈥渢end to overestimate the value of university and how much they鈥檒l get afterwards鈥. But while sceptics鈥 claims that higher education expansion in the 1990s eroded the graduate premium 鈥渉ave not stood up鈥, in Britton鈥檚 estimation, he conceded that it is very hard to say what the returns are going to be for people who have attended university more recently, particularly given the developments in AI.
Mountford-Zimdars, too, said that the 鈥渏ury is out鈥 on whether universities will remain able to drive social mobility in a rapidly changing labour market 鈥 and, crucially, whether they will continue to be seen to have that ability.
鈥淭en years ago鈥he middle classes would have certainly said that going to a Russell Group university and getting a good degree in anything is a really good strategy. But I鈥檓 not sure that those same parents鈥re necessarily still thinking that at the moment,鈥 she said.
For West London鈥檚 Atherton, too, graduate debt has created a 鈥渘ew perspective鈥 among UK school-leavers outside Scotland that 鈥渋t鈥檚 better to do it without a degree鈥 if you can. And to the extent that getting a degree is still seen as crucial to employability, it is seen as akin to 鈥渟wallowing some medicine you don鈥檛 like to get better in the end鈥.
Jerrim suggested that one upside of the increased scepticism about degrees could be an increase in the number of young people willing to consider apprenticeships or other alternative routes into gainful employment.
鈥淚f that message is getting through to the right groups鈥hen that actually could be helping the social mobility story,鈥 he said. 鈥淸For] the marginal kids 鈥 the kids that may or may not benefit from actually going to university 鈥 if it鈥檚 giving them more realistic messages and expectations, you could argue it鈥檚 actually quite a good thing.鈥
But does that mean that, in the end, universities have proved not to be the engines of social mobility they always saw 鈥 and marketed 鈥 themselves as?
鈥淭he great aspiration to level the playing field: we have to be honest [and admit] that if we look back at the last 50 years, we have not actually delivered on that promise,鈥 Major conceded.
But it is unfair to blame universities alone because a big part of the social mobility equation is employment, he added. And research has shown that among people with the same degree, those from a more privileged upbringing will still be more successful in the workplace and earn more.
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鈥淯ltimately, I think some of this debate comes around much more to things like inequality and whether we鈥檙e paying people the right salaries, whatever jobs people are doing,鈥 said Major. 鈥淯niversities can鈥檛 solve all that鈥t has to be a societal approach that involves universities. They aren鈥檛 going to level the playing field on their own.鈥
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