University funding/finances
Policymakers urged to learn lessons from ‘advanced’ overseas model
How are universities faring after the first full year of operating under the £9,000 fees regime?
Redundancy talks start as body prepares for loss of grant support by 2017
Years after Thatcher, says Simon Marginson, commerce is marginal to the sector. True competition would destroy its essence
Charges could help to subsidise poor students, says Northwestern University president
Nearly £1 billion in state-backed funding will be paid to students at private colleges next year.
If Labour does adopt a graduate tax policy it will be making a grave mistake, says Emran Mian
Johnny Rich on a simple change that could erase student debt, fund universities and boost employability - without costing taxpayers more
Big post-92s suffer as Hefce steers allocations towards strong recruiters
A £2.5 billion drop in forecast student loan repayments over six years means the government will “massively overrun” on its higher education budget, independent experts have warned
Hitting RAB charge ‘threshold’ will make £9,000 system more costly than old
Teaching grants for universities in England are to fall by more than the £45 million announced last month, the country’s funding council has said.
But critics warn of funding eligibility problems in plan to collaborate on projects
David Willetts highlights possible delay in filling extra undergraduate places
UK spending on research and development as a proportion of gross domestic product fell in 2012, according to new figures.
We must press politicians to show how a future government will support the sector, says Christopher Snowden
Willetts hints that ‘unplanned’ expansion after cap lifts will be scrutinised
Adding 30,000 extra places will spread teaching funds even thinner, sector figures warn
Slowing growth in international student numbers could have “a material impact on the sector”, while a financial blow from pensions could be looming.
Scheme to be run jointly with Higher Education Funding Council for England
Move comes as unions continue to fight below-inflation pay offer
‘No preconceptions’ as Higher Education Commission begins exploration of long-term financial sustainability
Wealthy foreigners could gain visas and an accelerated route to British citizenship by donating large sums to universities, a new report suggests
But 600 vote against amid discontent over salary plans
The new Higher Education Policy Institute director has called for reform of regulatory differences between universities and private providers.
It’s hard for specialist institutions to go it alone, but mergers may bring few benefits, says Miriam David
Rama Thirunamachandran moots idea of a loan system ‘underpinned by the private sector’
MPs in charge of examining public spending “don’t have confidence” in the government figures behind the £200 billion student loans system.
Grant letter keeps new cuts down and widening participation funding stays
The concept of a student market - and so the involvement of the Consumers’ Association - is flawed, argues Martin McQuillan
Could England force a similar reversal? Howard Hotson asks
By Scott Jaschik, for Inside Higher Ed
The research councils will receive more than double the capital funding in 2015-16 than they were originally allocated for 2014-15, it has been revealed
The government has delivered a £125 million cut to higher education funding in today’s grant letter, while criticising vice-chancellors on pay
A commitment by government to consult over a long-term plan for science capital investment has been welcomed by the Lords Science and Technology Committee.
A private college “supplied misleading information” that led to students wrongly gaining access to public-backed loans, according to the government
University warns more savings are needed as it admits international recruitment will not recover for years
The experience of uncapping numbers in the UK will be different from that in Australia, says Libby Hackett
Paul Gibbons says lack of time, money and legal clarity can all affect universities’ responses to FoI Act requests
The budget for universities in Scotland will remain almost exactly the same in cash terms in 2014-15, the Scottish Funding Council has confirmed
Arguing the case for market forces in higher education will become harder if a university looks likely to fail, warns Emran Mian
Does more mean better or worse?
The reckless pursuit of rank threatens the academy’s future, argues Roger Brown
We’ll make the principles of Robbins a 21st-century reality, minister promises
A group of colleges at the University of Cambridge have collectively raised £150 million for capital projects through the private debt market.
Ideology and myopia threatens the future of some of the UK’s best humanities departments, warns Louis Goddard
Aldwyn Cooper takes aim at the coalition’s haphazard policymaking
The Treasury’s stated plan to fund expansion in student places by the sale of loans omits £1.7 billion in lost repayments arising from the sell off.
Shadow universities minister delivers vision for sector in first major speech
Yesterday’s announcement that student number controls are to be abolished has attracted comment from all quarters. Here is a round-up of responses:
The Russell Group has attacked the government’s decision to abolish student number caps, warning of a potential decline in quality.
The government has given quantum technologies research a boost in the autumn statement.
The government has been warned by a leading peer not to cut the science and research budget in today’s autumn statement.
BIS admits scale of planned recruitment was ‘unaffordable’
Lack of interdisciplinarity and pared funds a cause of concern for social sciences
Government-matched funding scheme would cut debt burden and improve social equality, say researchers
Wholly owned university accommodation apes private charges
HESA announces publication date for data on number of researchers eligible for submission
A total of £2 million is to be spent on helping universities support students who want to work in social enterprise and entrepreneurship.
Social mobility could be harmed if cuts of £45 million are focused on the so-called “widening participation premium”, a new study says