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Billionaire Alex Gerko has criticised British governments for failing to fund maths research, as his trading firm XTX Markets donated £26mn to seven UK universities.
“Despite successive governments’ pro-innovation rhetoric, years of underfunding in mathematics research have caused UK universities to miss out on too much of the world’s top talent,” Gerko said.
XTX said on Monday it would donate £26.37mn to fund more than 100 PhD and postdoctoral pure maths research positions at universities across the UK.
“This programme may help to fill the gap, but leaving strategically vital funding to philanthropy is a dereliction of duty,” Gerko added.
Gerko is one of the UK’s richest people and the country’s biggest individual taxpayer, according to Sunday Times estimates. The Russia-born entrepreneur gained a maths PhD in Moscow and later founded XTX in London in 2015, building it into one of the UK’s top private businesses. Gerko earned £682mn from XTX’s profits last year.
The funding will be split between the universities of Cambridge, Oxford, Bristol, Edinburgh, Liverpool, Warwick and Imperial College London. The institutions will themselves choose which students to admit, with the money funding university places starting in 2026, 2027 and 2028.
British universities are facing a long-term funding squeeze. Fewer enrolments from international students due to more stringent immigration rules are also affecting university finances.
About 41 per cent of institutions will fail to balance their books next year despite an inflation-linked rise in tuition fees, according to recent government figures.
XTX’s donation will vary depending on the university and the trading firm declined to disclose the split between institutions. The University of Cambridge said the donation would help it appoint about 10 PhD students and up to two postdoctoral researchers in each of the coming three years.
Gerko has long cared about maths education. He founded children’s charity Axiom Maths in 2022 and, alongside his wife Elena, is funding the creation of a specialist maths secondary school in Mill Hill, North London, which is set to open to pupils next year.
The billionaire is often critical of UK politicians and has spoken out against funding cuts in maths education. XTX pointed to government figures showing that just 41 per cent of a promised £300mn in government funding for mathematical sciences was allocated before the programme was cancelled in 2022.
Simon Coyle, head of philanthropy at XTX, pointed to cuts in the numbers of the UK’s Centres for Doctoral Training, which are research centres for PhD candidates, saying that maths funding “is being decimated”.
“If you take the government’s goals and strategies at face value, they imply a significant need for more mathematicians and quantitative talent,” he said. He pointed to the government’s pushes on cyber security, defence and AI, adding that AI in particular “is basically maths . . . fundamentally that is maths talent”.
“It shouldn’t fall to philanthropy to be filling the gaps for what are nationally strategic, critical issues,” Coyle added.
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