The Polish government has raised concerns about an âacademic staffing gapâ, as the scientific workforce ages and fewer young researchers enter academia.
Speaking to Times Higher Education, deputy minister of science and higher education Karolina ZioĆo-PuĆŒuk described a âvery difficultâ situation exacerbated by a recent reform to Polandâs PhD system as well as ongoing low wages in academia.
, ârelated both to the increasing ageing of the faculty and the difficulty in attracting young researchersâ, as a âsignificant problemâ that the upcoming Higher Education Development Strategy, currently in its consultation period, should address.
âThe main barrier remains the level of remuneration, which remains uncompetitive with the private sector,â the ministry said in a press release. âThis is despite record-breaking investments in infrastructure and growing budgetary allocations to science.â
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While national pay rises were introduced in January 2024, comprising a 30 per cent increase to teaching staff salaries and a 20 per cent increase for non-teaching staff, academics have said the increase only compensated for inflation and did not constitute a notable improvement to their remuneration.
The 2018 reform of Polandâs PhD system, which saw the introduction of doctoral schools and a universal doctoral stipend, was implemented because âthe success rate of PhD candidates was very lowâ, ZioĆo-PuĆŒuk explained.
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âThe idea behind it was that when weâve got fewer PhD candidates, weâll be able to provide them with a stipend for the four years of the research programme. Then we will definitely have a higher number of people who will get the PhD at the end.â
Instead, the deputy minister said, âthe number of PhD students has dropped dramaticallyâ. Within the European Union, Poland has the lowest share of doctoral students out of the total number of higher education students in the country, at 1.7 per cent; the EU average is 3.8 per cent, according to the latest Eurostat figures.
Moreover, âthe number of students completing PhD programmes is not as high as we would expectâ, she said, creating âa gap in some areas of scienceâ.
Academia âis not seen as an interesting career in terms of moneyâ, the deputy minister said, with many young researchers taking second jobs that then restrict their international mobility. âIn such circumstances, itâs difficult to find the time and space to conduct research abroad,â she told THE, âwhich unfortunately limits our opportunities to develop international collaboration.â
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The ministry is working with the National Agency for Academic Exchange, ZioĆo-PuĆŒuk said, in an effort to boost early-career researchersâ participation in international mobility programmes and create âmore stable conditions for building an international academic careerâ.
Without action to address the staffing gap, she said, âwe're concerned that in the coming years there may be an insufficient number of academic staff capable of conducting high-quality teaching and research".
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