British Council faces more job cuts to help pay off £197m loan
The Guardian World ·

The British Council faces cutting its workforce further and closing operations in 11 countries as it struggles to repay a crippling £197m Covid-era government loan that threatens its survival, the …
The British Council faces cutting its workforce further and closing operations in 11 countries as it struggles to repay a crippling £197m Covid-era government loan that threatens its survival, the public spending watchdog has said. The UK’s soft-power agency remains loss-making six years on from the pandemic and is not expected to make a profit until 2029-30, a report from the National Audit Office says. Repayment of the 2020 loan from the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office (FCDO), originally £60m plus market-value interest and now standing at £197m, is due in September 2027. The agency, which has promoted English-language teaching and UK culture abroad for almost a century, has not paid back any capital since 2024 but has paid £42m in interest and expects to pay another £53m in interest by 2029-30. It has incurred net losses of £184m since the pandemic. The FCDO and the agency are now said to be in the final stages of negotiations to come to agreement on how the loan can be repaid, with the focus said to be on agreeing to pay back within 15 years, the report says. A turnaround plan put forward by the agency would involve further staff reductions of about 15%, or roughly 1,180 of its 7,880-strong global workforce, by 2029-30 through redundancies, non-renewal of contracts and natural wastage, it is understood. This is in addition to the 2,110 jobs already lost since 2021. Operations would close in 11 countries and be pared back in 15 others, the report says. …
Original source: The Guardian World