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Why We Should be Narrowing Access to Higher Education

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The Sutton Trust report on achievement and social advantage seeks to examine the critical role of higher education in shaping social mobility and addressing entrenched socio-economic inequalities. By analysing the pathways of disadvantaged students into higher education and their subsequent labour market outcomes, the report aims to provide an evidence-based understanding of how universities contribute—or fail to contribute—to equalising opportunities across socio-economic groups.

The report’s purpose is twofold: first, to highlight the disparities in access to and success within higher education for students from different backgrounds, and second, to identify the institutions, subjects, and practices that are most effective in fostering social mobility. By doing so, it challenges prevailing assumptions about academic merit and institutional prestige, offering a nuanced perspective on how structural inequalities in education perpetuate privilege.

Ultimately, the report is a call to action for policymakers, educators, and universities to rethink their approach to access and attainment. It advocates for targeted interventions that not only widen participation for under-represented groups, but also ensure that these students achieve outcomes on par with their more advantaged peers. In doing so, the report underscores the potential of higher education as a driver of transformative social change, while also pointing to the work that remains to create a genuinely equitable system.

There is, however, another viewpoint from which to discuss this issue.

In an uninhibited employment market supposedly based on merit—where talent, intelligence, and capability are the primary determinants of success—people from advantaged backgrounds still often retain their socio-economic position. This is because structural advantages, rather than inherent ability alone, significantly influence outcomes. Even when merit is claimed to be the benchmark, its application is often entangled with existing social inequalities. Here’s why:

Why Do People from Advantaged Backgrounds Retain Their Position?

Unequal Starting Points

Bias in the Definition of Merit

Social Capital and Networking

Economic Safety Nets

Imperfect Meritocracy in Employment

Is Merit Applied Independently of Social Class in University Selection?

Structural Barriers to Entry

Influence of Private Education

Limited Recognition of Non-Traditional Merit

Legacy and Influence

Even in a hypothetical meritocratic environment, systemic advantages enjoyed by people from wealthier backgrounds—better preparation, networking, and resilience against failure—ensure that they are disproportionately represented in high-status positions. In university selection, merit is not applied independently of social class. Structural barriers, uneven opportunities, and bias in evaluating potential mean that social mobility remains constrained.

A truly equitable system would require broad reforms, such as more significant contextual admissions policies, equal access to high-quality education, and greater accountability in employment practices to reduce the impact of privilege.

Many individuals from advantaged backgrounds often navigate the academic process with minimal challenge or effort, coasting on a sense of entitlement fostered by their privilege. This lack of pressure to excel or innovate can lead to the maintenance of the status quo rather than the development of new ideas or approaches. Such individuals are frequently prioritised in the education system due to bourgeois assumptions about cultural fit and inherited notions of capability, which are deeply counterproductive to a truly merit-based approach to academic achievement.

Rather than focusing solely on widening access, addressing inequality in higher education requires a shift towards narrowing access. This involves identifying and removing those who leverage their social privilege to secure opportunities without demonstrating the capacity or drive to contribute meaningfully to intellectual and societal advancement. Instead, efforts should prioritise individuals, including many from working-class backgrounds, who demonstrate exceptional critical thinking, creativity, and problem-solving abilities but are often overlooked due to systemic biases.

The potential of working-class students to out-think and outperform their more entitled middle-class peers is substantial, but remains underutilised. By dismantling entrenched barriers that favour cultural conformity and inherited advantage, higher education institutions can cultivate a truly meritocratic environment, one that fosters genuine innovation and progress rather than perpetuating mediocrity and complacency among the privileged.

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