That's exactly the issue we're seeing with universities. At an aggregate level, the capacity is there. The courses that are unduly frowned upon e.g. vocational will be ditched in favour of, for instance, Maths, and we'll have a situation where there are not enough Maths teachers to meet the demand, to the detriment of those who would have qualified if the exams had taken place.Doesn’t everyone qualify for sixth form or college anyway now the leaving age is 18? Surely the capacity is there, it’s just the courses? In which case if everyone’s inflated then it all trickles down and you just up the requirements.
As soon as the exams were cancelled there was going to be issues.
So they'll have to either raise the entry requirements for individual courses to account for the fact that, for instance, being in the top 40% of the cohort meant that you got at least a B before whereas it now means you must have achieved an A and adjust accordingly. That itself has huge issues, as the universities are seeing that the government is insisting that offers must be honoured with the retrospective change to the grading distribution. And then many courses that are very worthwhile pursuing will take a hit to funding. It's going to be really unsustainable.