11 July 2014
Bay benefits from Tauranga campus
A tertiary campus in downtown Tauranga will generate benefits of $188 million over the next 20 years and provide a rate
of return of more than 30% on the initial investment, a new report says.
The Bay of Plenty Tertiary Education Partnership – comprising the University of Waikato, Bay of Plenty Polytechnic, Te
Whare Wānanga o Awanuiārangi and Waiariki Institute of Technology - has had plans for a CBD campus on the cards for
several years.
Bay of Plenty Tertiary Education Partnership Steering Group chair Bill Wasley says the benefits of the project to the
economic and social development of the region are clear and it shows what can be achieved when organisations work
together.
“This project has been driven and supported by the community from day one and this report backs the community view that
a campus development in Tauranga will be hugely beneficial to the entire region.”
The June Benefit Cost Analysis Report says the plan is robust and an “attractive investment opportunity” with low risk
and the potential to impact positively on many key areas of the Bay of Plenty economy.
It would see nearly 6500 students commencing studies in Tauranga between 2015 and 2035 and provide more than 4000
graduates to the region.
Graduates will provide one of the “key benefits” from the development and this will be reflected in higher salaries and
productivity gains for employers. The additional research possible through the campus will increase ‘the innovation,
economic, environmental and social capacity of the city and region’.
The report, prepared by Professor Frank Scrimgeour from the Waikato Management School, shows the campus – while still
reliant on funding - would also impact positively on attracting researchers and teachers, postgraduate students,
international students, and retaining undergraduate students in Tauranga, along with allowing the development of new
programmes for delivery in Tauranga.
University of Waikato Vice-Chancellor Professor Roy Crawford says the University-led campus development will deliver
programmes and activities directly related to areas of economic development in the region.
“It will enable a step change in improving social, educational and economic outcomes for people in the region,” he says.
An earlier economic impact report showed that in 2013 the University of Waikato’s operations in the Bay of Plenty
generated more than $8 million in GDP for the region and created 43 jobs.
“With a fully-fledged campus in downtown Tauranga, there will be more economic and community benefits and more jobs
created, bringing real benefits to the region.”
ENDS