Figures also show increased spending by academies on supply staff Academies have overspent by more than £170m, the latest government figures have shown.Numbers released today by the Department for Education show that academies' expenditure exceeded their income by £171m.Academies received a total income of £16.74bn in the year ending August 2015, but they spent £16.91bn. The overspend equates to 1 per cent of the academies' income.The government states that this does not mean the academies have fallen into debt, "as they may have reserve funds from which these costs were able to be met".The news is likely to raise questions about academy chains building up reserves, rather than spending the money on children's education.The figures show that expenditure on teaching staff as a proportion of total expenditure has fallen by 4.4 percentage points since 2011/12. At the same time, spending has increased on supply staff and support staff.Overall, academies spent £8.27bn on teaching staff, but also £440m on supply staff. The figures reveal the growing demands that the teacher recruitment and retention shortage is having on school budgets.According to the data, 95.8 per cent of academies' income came through direct grants, with the remainder generated by the academies themselves. Ark Schools was able to raise more than £11m on its own, more than any other academy trust.Continue reading →