University funding/finances
Plugging gaps with higher fees paid by students from overseas has allowed institutions to dodge political battles over funding, but it won’t last
Multiple universities pay multimillion-dollar settlements over spring 2020 tuition, as they reach deadline to finish spending federal pandemic relief aid
As NIH pushes for improvement on racial and gender measures, drag attributed to growing segment of non-diverse principal investigators
Small Canadian private university to end classes after this semester, while holding out hope for future revival
Multibillion-dollar industry bouncing back as visa grants and international arrivals surge
Charging students who already have a similar degree could gain traction among politicians tiptoeing around free higher education ahead of April’s elections
Biochemist ends nine-year tenure at Norwich institution after staff pass vote of no confidence
Former head of income and payments was able to cover up his crimes for 30 years
Vice-chancellor warns of cuts to areas such as degree apprenticeships and infrastructure projects if fee squeeze continues
More universities may opt to increase charges if government offers no way out of growing deficits, scholar warns
Union calls for criminalisation of ‘wage theft’ with jail time for worst offenders
Monthly payments not enough to counter massive rises in cost of living, says students’ union
Eight per cent hit overall but smallest portfolios worst affected, while Harvard and Texas remain out in front
In THE survey, university leaders rebuff unions’ calls for double-digit pay rises as some stress current offer is already unaffordable
Data show wealthy students benefit disproportionately from NZ$200 million annual borrowing holiday
Big Group of Eight institutions got bigger while others suffered, exacerbating ‘David and Goliath scenario’
Board members of bankrupt Islamic institution accused of laundering more than €1 million and firearms offences
Country’s top policy advisory body calls for project funding to be more generous with fewer constraints, as institutions’ budgets swell
More support and less complex regulation will allow the hybrid qualifications to flourish across more English institutions and sectors, says Dan Lally
Warning of ‘stranded funding’ as bureaucrats bend the rules of a programme with too many goals
Institution famed for its brutalist campus has paid price for bad luck and bad decisions, staff say
The ‘sector’ may be able to afford more than the current offer, but many individual universities cannot, says Peter Sloane
Rishi Sunak's plan for mathematics to age 18 would come too late to save many university departments, says Ulrike Tillmann
Enrolment declines also shrink, but inflation and historical patterns cited as reasons for sector to expect danger may be lurking
Decision to deter non-EU students with fees likely to ratchet up pressure in an already stretched labour market, particularly for energy and other engineering graduates
Rising Universities Superannuation Scheme provisions mean three-quarters of institutions report deficits, with losses totalling £3.6 billion
First casualty of 2023 may not be the last as federal funds that kept many institutions artificially solvent during the pandemic dry up
Highly regarded institution cuts back due to falling student numbers, high dropout rates and rising energy costs
Extraordinary growth in income caused by higher enrolments and post-Brexit fee uplifts bolsters finances of Russell Group institutions
Ministers accused of adding bureaucracy then ‘putting the costs on universities’ with planned rise while cutting student support in real terms
Reports of a 13 per cent rise in registration fees is unjustifiable in the current economic environment, says Stephen Marston
Trump administration found by congressional watchdog to have largely abandoned investigative office, while Biden team pressed to fix things quicker
London’s revered ‘night university’ enters bicentenary year mired in financial crisis
Westminster government criticised by sector over 2.8 per cent uplift as concern mounts over impact of cost-of-living crisis on students
As bids are polished for the latest round of university alliance grants, debate is building over where longer-term funding should come from
A new ‘accord’ is promised, but hopes under previous Labor governments have sometimes been dashed, says Greg McCarthy
The divestment movement can claim victory. But what about all the companies that enable fossil fuel exploitation, asks Zak Coleman
Move to ‘ease burden’ on applicants could leave institutions with ‘no choice’ but to raise other costs, scholar warns
After a tumultuous 2022, what will the new year bring for higher education? Some of the UK sector’s respected crystal-ball gazers offer their predictions for 2023
Labour leader says party has ‘a number of propositions’ on the issue that will be put forward before the next general election
Universities and regions must decide whether to step in and meet rising demand for more generous scholarship grants
Cardiff University’s Colin Riordan says disappointing proposed budget for Welsh universities will worsen financial pressures caused by inflation
Financially troubled University of the South Pacific was left with £29 million black hole when leadership fell out with biggest member state
It’s been a bleak year as war brought more pain to a world still shaken by the pandemic and other pressures. Universities will be glad to put it behind them
Financial statements, when eventually published, revealed ‘material uncertainty’ over institution’s ability to keep running and £17 million deficit
Students ‘unlikely to be high up the list of priorities’ for further funding despite risk of dropouts
UAL-commissioned report looks at alternatives inside and outside current system in wake of ‘regressive’ changes
Vice-chancellors’ group launches ‘national conversation’ on future UK-wide research funding and teaching support in England
If the government is set on cutting international students, charging domestic students above the current ceiling is the only option, says Peter Ainsworth
Leaked pitch for gambling hall and online expansion comes after university experts warn majority of income likely to come from addicts
As underpayment claims embroil at least half the sector, Griffith’s proposed circuit breaker provokes more discord
Top research universities have long cited their value in growing local economies, but massive graduate student walkout suggests a critical need to better protect the people who make the magic happen
As political own goals go, threatening to both cap and confine international students to ‘elite’ institutions was in a class of its own, says David Bell
As tuition discounting hits record rates, nation’s higher education leaders feel need to end confusion over their net prices before lawmakers try to do it
More hardship funding, bigger maintenance loans and restored grants would all complement universities’ efforts, says Sarah Stevens
The department’s threat to ban international students from all but the top UK universities is totally counterproductive, says Nick Hillman
Return of grants after almost a decade of loans could create an enrolment surge in an already straining system
The array of challenges facing universities and their leaders is daunting, with a broken funding system underpinning the pain in England
For all their collegiality, pay disparity in Australian universities is ‘not out of step’ with big business
Leading institutions are not ‘lining their pockets’ by shifting recruitment to international students, says analysis, and situation for less prestigious campuses is even worse