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Vice-chancellor's Overview

OPERATION REVENUE REVOLUTION 75+

On July 14, 2021, Vice-Chancellor Professor Sir Hilary Beckles led the University’s EMT in a strategic planning retreat launching “Operation RR75+”, the second five-year period of its ten-year strategic plan.

The new five-year operation plan, Operation Revenue Revolution 75+, represented the first time in its history that the University was implementing an operational plan dedicated solely and exclusively to addressing its financial sustainability.

In the prior five-year operational plan, themed “The Reputation Revolution”, the University focused on rebuilding its brand, and radically upgrading its reputation regionally and globally as a pre-condition for the second phase.

According to Vice-Chancellor Beckles, the results of this first phase were “spectacular”, as exemplified by many historic successes such as The UWI’s Triple 1st ranking from the Times Higher Education: number 1 in the Caribbean, top 1% in Latin America and the Caribbean region, and top 1% in its global cohort (of universities between 50 and 80 years old).

Governmental perspective

Addressing the retreat was Chairman of CARICOM, Prime Minister the Honourable Gaston Browne, who spoke from the perspective of contributing governments. Prime Minister Browne embraced the University’s vision and strategy and predicted that the change process would see the University doing well. He noted that the governments were solidly behind the regional university in leading financial reforms for greater autonomy and endorsed the quest to radically alter The UWI’s financial circumstances

Private sector perspective Group President and CEO of Sagicor Financial Corporation Limited, Dr. Dodridge Miller, representing the private sector perspective, spoke about benefits of The UWI learning from the Sagicor model in going from local and regional to global to secure its financial future and assure the quality of its offerings to the Caribbean people. Regional development perspective New President of the Caribbean Development Bank, Dr. Hyginus ‘Gene’ Leon, speaking from a regional development perspective, commended the University for accurately reading the challenges endemic to its domestic eco-system, and operationalising an innovative response that would serve the institution and region well. Vice-Chancellor Beckles iterated that the University cannot continue to grow, innovate, and prosper solely within its domestic financial base. He recognised the devastation of the regional economy by COVID-19 leading to governments’ inability to fund it at the approved level. Underscoring that the global gaze was now at centre stage within the five-year operational plan, he said, “There has been an explosion of innovation within The UWI during the last five years, and we are capturing this in the current strategy. This will be reflected in an upsurge in productivity, cost reduction, and the greater application of technologies to the new business culture.”