Long-term plans need to be drawn up for Scotland's schools to reflect falling pupil numbers, a think tank has said.
The Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) said there could be 90,000 fewer pupils in the country's classrooms by 2040 - and suggested that teacher numbers could be cut as a result.
The group said this could eventually free up £500m per year, but the government has flatly rejected the idea.
Teaching unions have hit out too, with the EIS saying cutting teacher numbers "lacks any educational rationale" and the NASUWT calling it a "false economy" that would damage life chances and Scotland's future prosperity.
But when you consider the falling birth rate and demographic changes alongside the need to get the maximum benefit out of every pound spent on services, is it time to talk about teacher numbers?