University funding/finances
Job security guarantees would tie management’s hands while offering only short-term cost relief, v-cs say
Improving remote learning may be smartest move universities can make, quality chief advises
England’s main skills challenge is not over-education but preparing workers for the emerging economy, says Tim Blackman
As after the 2008 financial crisis, Swedes have responded to the coronavirus-induced downturn by making plans to return to university
Support and opposition on both sides could make job-saving pact a close-run thing
State institutions that survive crisis will face student influx and must prioritise ‘communities they were designed to serve’, experts say
EUA policy expert warns against financially driven institutional mergers as solution in crisis
Activists campaign for less reliance on international education income, as government flags a ‘supervised’ reopening of borders
While institutional accounts indicate that the average university boss could have pocketed seven-digit earnings last year, 2020 will be a different story
‘Classic risk management tools’ helped protect the University of Tasmania, says its former management consultant boss
Victoria’s A$350m lifeline adds to the pressure on Canberra to do more to help embattled sector
Accusations that China is stealing virus research could harm US vaccine efforts and overseas enrolments, experts warn
Australian universities decline union-sponsored agreement, citing individual circumstances and governance concerns
Analysis shows that a dramatic loss of fee income will hit institutions in Wales harder than the rest of the UK
Video conferencing is a reasonable substitute for lectures, but that is where it must end, say Robert Zaretsky and George Alliger
Many bosses lead from the front, ceding 20-plus per cent of their pay to help plug pandemic shortfalls
Some succour for NZ universities and students in budget aiming to support training for those who have lost jobs in crisis
The Covid-19 pandemic offers universities a once-in-a-generation opportunity to put their dysfunctional strategies behind them, argue Timothy Devinney and Grahame Dowling
England's OfS reveals how next year's £48 million teaching grant cut will be spread across institutions
Record year for university philanthropy in UK and Ireland sees Oxford and Cambridge dominate fundraising
Redundancies beckon at Australia’s oldest university as bosses and workers alike hold the line
Anticipating a renewed coronavirus outbreak, California State University plans for semester online
Bitter internal conflict brews over union plan to offer pay concessions in return for employment safeguards
Academic union faces member fightback over détente with university administrations
Innovation on the line, as coronavirus unleashes domino effect on research mainstream
Student wariness may deliver final blow to crisis-weakened institutions
Clay feet of cross-subsidy policies exposed by Covid-19 crisis, representative groups say
Optimism emerges over Australian and New Zealand education exports despite Canberra’s hands-off approach
Australian university’s losses ‘less than our east coast counterparts’, acting v-c tells staff
Universities should also stop ‘stealing’ money allocated for education to undertake research, according to Minerva founder
The initiative’s success means that higher education is expected to remain a focus of China’s next five-year plan, says Wu Zhaohui
Economical changes and positive mindset could alleviate the industry’s woes, says federal MP
After sex crime conviction, elite university gave financier-donor his own office
Lawyers hired by students reject institutional pleas of financial duress
Sector singled out as Canberra makes changes on the fly to its JobKeeper employment subsidy scheme
But commentators question legality, terminology and strategic value
Newly funded work to include investigations into how the city brought infections down to nearly zero
Lawyer warns over alleged meeting between institutions on foreign students
University finances are supposedly staring into the abyss – but we shouldn’t get giddy, says Paul Jump
State’s contribution contrasts with Canberra’s ‘baffling and callous’ approach, critics say
Researchers from universities most dependent on international education insist current restrictions must be retained
Members of the Universities Superannuation Scheme are about to vote on whether to lock in current members. But this might not be enough to safeguard the scheme’s solvency, says Bernard Casey
Reeling from freefalling international enrolments, Australian universities now face renewed threats from geopolitical tensions
Government moves the goal posts as universities explore fine print of bailout rules
Educational economist Miguel Urquiola tells Matthew Reisz about the upsides of inequality and the dangers of ‘unbundling’
Partnership approach during pandemic raises hopes of bursting scientific silos
President, lawmakers allocate money then accuse Harvard and others of taking it
After rejection of virtual peer review, federal agency halts new awards, prompting concerns for younger researchers
The transformation of high street branches offers lessons on how universities may need to adapt when lockdown is lifted, writes a UK university professor
While universities commit hundreds of millions of dollars to help domestic and foreign students, dissatisfaction remains
Union members mount fightback as their leadership countenances pay cuts
International education losses ‘are like losing a car manufacturing industry every six months’
Commentators express doubts over Canberra’s online road to post-pandemic prosperity
Fine print reveals that universities can expect to recoup perhaps one dollar for every seven they lose
Rebuffed on pricing and open access, universities refuse full-access renewals
New arrangements will ‘pivot’ university offerings to areas of greatest domestic need, government says
Continuing remote teaching in the autumn will be unsustainable for some institutions, warns leader of online college
With admissions already in decline, Brian Rosenberg wonders whether the end may finally be nigh for many colleges
With foreign student numbers down and forlorn hopes for a government bailout, sector’s hopes may lie in expanded domestic enrolments
Tough choices await as institutions revisit ideas that could cut staff numbers and ramp up fees