Professor John Clancy and Professor David Bailey
By Professor John Clancy and Professor David Bailey
10th September 2025
There are about 46,000 teachers in all of the state schools in the West Midlands. Their staff pay costs are approximately £2 billion a year. These teachers are not in the West Midlands pension fund, they have their own separate pension scheme, which doesn’t have a fund.
Pretty much everyone else employed in a state school In the West Midlands is in the WMPF, an actual fund. Their wage costs are £933million
Which means the academies and free schools are highly likely to have pension fund surpluses of £1.01 Billion.
When you add the primary, secondary and special schools still under the control of the West Midlands region’s 7 councils (and deducted from their respective councils surpluses) it’s likely £1.6 billion in spending has been lost to the region’s 524,000 schoolchildren in state primary, secondary and special schools.
With FE Colleges and Universities added, over £2 billion has likely been lost to education sector spending as a whole across the West Midlands.
We estimate that broadly similar surplus figures will apply to local authority maintained schools (subsumed inside their respective local authorities own surpluses). Much of the central services used by them will also be similarly subsumed.
Consequently, as the average primary school size in the West Midlands is 371 pupils, the average primary school’s surplus would likely be as much as £1.1 million.
The average secondary school size in the West Midlands is 1,077 pupils. So the average Secondary School surplus would likely be as much as £2.6million.
The average special schooll size is 159 pupils.
Special schools in the West Midlands spend significantly more per pupil, but also proportionately much more (6 times more per pupil) on non-teaching staff (54% of all staff costs, as opposed to 41% in primary, and 27% in secondary) so the average special school surplus would likely be as much as £2.5 million.
We should emphasise that we believe schools are owed much, much more, because we think the WMPF should be using a considerably higher discount rate to calculate the pensions they owe, but that’s for another blog.
So what’s happened is a scandal which has affected each community by the loss of council services to it, yes; but, equally, the loss of services and investment in its schools, colleges, police and fire services. Every community has lost millions of pounds worth of services it should have received this coming year, and in previous years.
But the biggest loss has been to the region's schools and its schoolchildren’s education.
In our next blog we will explain how these surpluses came effectively to be hidden from view, and so how headteachers, principals, and vice-chancellors of educational institutions, and the bosses of other key public services, effectively came to be unaware of their existence. And how they could have, and can now, force the return of the surpluses lost from their spending. Now.