University funding/finances
Anna McKie explores what the recommendations mean for universities, students, graduates and taxpayers
The UK’s TEF experience should be a warning to Australia’s re-elected government not to settle for empty accountability, says William Locke
The risk is high that a future government will not replace lost fee funding with the investment universities need, says Bill Rammell
Cost growth still set to outstrip funding, as ‘fees free’ absorbs the fat
School’s new student intake fell by nearly 40 per cent in just two years
The panel have skilfully avoided some potential elephant traps and have come up with a sensible and wide-ranging view that deserves political attention – even if it doesn’t get it, says Nick Hillman
Consumerism, technology and the culture wars threaten to render critical thinking an unwanted skill, worries Victor Ferrall
Survival depends on institutional buy-in to a fundamental questioning of operating models and cost structures, says Angus Laing
Education secretary’s comments likely to be seen as preparing ground for post-18 review to recommend shifts or cuts in funding
‘Competition in scientific research has gone too far,’ says government-appointed committee proposing wide-ranging reform package
Cardiff policymakers unlikely to be able to make up lost tuition fee income while continuing generous maintenance support
Chancellor opposes extra spending on universities, sources suggest, as universities minister dodges questions on report publication
V-c who left school at 16 before entering university without A levels says university’s social mission is irreplaceable
Stanford University’s insistence that its press break even is another bleak milestone in corporatisation, says David Palumbo-Liu
System president says new academic hiring programme and innovation network will boost university following financial issues
A review following the latest iteration of the PBRF could lead to radical changes that undermine the gains made, warns Roger Smyth
Falling UK graduate wages reflect not too many students but a flexible labour market’s post-crash adjustment, argues David Willetts
US experience suggests budget shift has little impact on colleges’ results
Money pledged for universities carved up and back-ended, opposition document suggests
Initial moves on 2020 budget suggest another reversal of Trump priorities
Private equity-owned BIMM to receive £2.4m in teaching grant as OfS funds new providers for first time
But THE analysis also suggests windfall for institutions if fall in student recruitment is modest
Dutch universities are conspicuously and consistently successful. Yet their funding is declining and their embrace of internationalism has put them on a collision course with the populist right. John Morgan assesses the mood in Leiden, Rotterdam, Amsterdam and Maastricht
Monash wish list includes new agency, universal learning entitlement and ‘coherent’ funding model
Retirees are being invited to live and take classes alongside younger students. Jon Marcus reports
Fresh worries over poor English-language ability of some international students
Elite institutions making last-ditch bid to block multimillion-dollar levy
Proposals for delayed report have to be judged in the round – including implications for those who don’t go to university, says David Robinson
Hundreds of professors had signed petition opposing scrapping of annual subsidy from parent institution
Struggles of Hampshire College suggest to some that students may be reluctant to shape their own degrees in a debt-heavy, career-focused higher education sector
University threat to cut $1.7 million annual subsidy generates widespread protest
Proposal would also withdraw financial support for students from the European Union
Australia’s vice-chancellors must wake up: China's munificence is all motivated by its vast geopolitical ambition, says Nick Forster
The quality of Indian higher education outside a few elite institutions is notoriously poor, and a slew of initiatives aimed at addressing it have made little impact so far. Simon Baker analyses the data to assess the scale of the challenge and asks what more could and should be done
But revival of the demand-driven system would be a mixed blessing, consultant warns
Student action shows US colleges far from accepting their slavery-related debts
Ford administration is blind to incompatibility of statistical metrics and quality teaching, academics warn
Philosopher calls on universities to take AI debate ‘out of the hands of the industry’ and end ‘ethics washing’
Fractures emerge between Democratic candidates – but they, and even Republicans, actually share broad concerns on affordability
The Chinese tech giant’s challenge for universities will be far from an isolated case and universities are not prepared for the nuanced reaction required, says John Ross
Former universities minister says that, while parents of students with poorer A-levels could pay fees up front, less affluent families could not
A Labor victory in May’s election could still see funding conditional on universities’ employability, diversity or research records, says Andrew Norton
Big datasets linking higher education participation to a range of socio-economic factors are useful and fascinating, but their translation into policy remains fraught
The advent of datasets linking graduates’ income to their student records has fuelled calls for certain courses and universities to be excluded from public funding. But, ahead of England’s Augar review of post-18 education, the minister who commissioned the longitudinal education outcomes project, David Willetts, warns against such abuses of the data
Hundreds of jobs endangered by £142 million increase in contributions to Teachers’ Pension Scheme, universities say
After more than doubling its spending since the financial crisis, Germany’s long budget boom is set to come to an end
Despite its tarnished reputation and history of collapsed ventures, the for-profit sector retains a strong foothold on the US academy. Paul Basken tracks its successes and failures
Australian government accused of ‘robbing Peter to pay Paul’
Report from Office for Students says ‘unrealistic’ targets on recruitment could expose an institution to ‘significant risk’
Suggestions that review could yet be published before PM’s departure come as AoC says it will push DfE to ‘publish and implement’
Government affirms Medical Research Future Fund but raids dormant infrastructure kitty
Reduction in fees for rest-of-UK students would add to ‘perfect storm of uncertainty’, says Universities Scotland
Analysis of finance data for English universities suggests some institutions have responded by cutting staff costs
But Nicola Dandridge says that ‘to pile limited public resource into failing institution’ would be mistake
Advocacy groups worried by entry of high-cost private lenders to market
Department advertises for ‘policy expert on HE financial sustainability’ who will shape stance on ‘potential intervention’ if institutions risk closure
Despite thin pickings this time around, Trudeau’s Liberals have probably done enough to win the science vote in October’s election, says Creso Sá
Latest sector-wide figures likely to increase concerns about financial sustainability
Anthony Abraham Jack’s new book distinguishes two kinds of under-represented students and sets out what universities need to do if they truly want to recruit the most disadvantaged students. Matthew Reisz writes
Post-18 education review also said to have looked at proposals to allocate top-up public funding according to subjects’ cost of provision