The number of professors still working in UK higher education beyond their 65th birthday has risen by more than half in the past five years, raising questions about whether delayed retirement is making it even harder for younger researchers to reach the top rung of academia.
Professors in this age group made up 11.3Ā per cent of the professoriate in 2019-20, show, up from 8.6Ā per cent in 2014-15. Approaching half (46Ā per cent) of all professors are aged aboveĀ 55, with the share in the 36Ā toĀ 45 age bracket falling 2Ā percentage points over the period to 14Ā per cent. The number of professors in this younger age group has risen by just 2Ā per cent, to 3,190, since 2014-15, compared with an overall increase in the total professoriate of 16Ā per cent.
Whether older professors create a blockage in the system has been hotly debated since the UK abolished compulsory retirement in 2011. In 2019, physicist Paul Ewart won an employment tribunal case against the University of Oxfordās retirement age policy after arguing that it would create only a small number of opportunities for younger academics, one of its stated aims. Oxford is appealing the ruling.
Gergely Toldi, a consultant neonatologist who is a member of the Global Young Academy and an honorary research fellow at the University of Birmingham, said that in an āideal worldā, it should be possible for professors to work longer as well as creating enough opportunities for younger academics.
Āé¶¹
However, he warned that the coronavirus pandemic was creating more pressure for those early in their careers āasĀ their positions tend to be less secure than professorial chairsā.
Dr Toldi said one of the solutions had to be more funding opportunities āexclusivelyā for early career researchers, while there could also be mentoring opportunities to aid competitiveness in grant calls.
Āé¶¹
Anjali Shah, co-chair of the UKĀ Research Staff Association and an epidemiologist who advises on researcher development at Oxford, said one ācatch-22 elementā to the researcher pipeline was that it was often in postdocsā interest for senior staff to stay inĀ post.
āVery few researchers want their professors or principal investigators to retire because they have the reputation that brings in money for salaries and research projects. Those professors also act as mentors to junior researchers. Itās often the mid-level scientists who leave academic research, which does leave aĀ gap,ā she said.
Dr Shah said she would like to see more block funding in the sector going into creating longer-term āstaff scientistā roles across the whole career pipeline ātoĀ cover all the lab managers, epidemiologists, programme managers, statisticians and so on who do vital workā.
Gary Thomas, emeritus professor of inclusion and diversity at Birmingham, who recently retired agedĀ 70, said the mentorship that experienced staff could offer was a major asset that should be explored by institutions.
Āé¶¹
But universities could also ease intergenerational tensions through more use of schemes such as flexible retirement, where senior staff move to part-time work.
āFor some reason, the schemes, while available, are often refused to those who request them,ā he said. āThis would seem to me to be universities shooting themselves in the foot. If professors are willing to work for, say, 50Ā per cent salary, the university will gain hugely from their experience and expertise while [they are] still on the payroll.ā
Register to continue
Why register?
- Registration is free and only takes a moment
- Once registered, you can read 3 articles a month
- Sign up for our newsletter
Subscribe
Or subscribe for unlimited access to:
- Unlimited access to news, views, insights & reviews
- Digital editions
- Digital access to °Õ±į·”ās university and college rankings analysis
Already registered or a current subscriber?








