University funding and finances
  
  
   
  
      
  
  
    
        
  
  
      
            
  
      Ability to run courses and research in Leicester relies on income from international operations, leader warns after criticism of expansion plans
       
  
      Data shows surge in enrolments concentrated in metropolitan universities, as new Australian commission comes into being
       
  
      Cash-strapped university tightens executive pay as it hopes to return to ‘break-even’ position in 2025
       
  
      Iain Gillespie admits not knowing his former institution breached banking arrangements until reading about it in damning report
       
  
      Past few years have felt like ‘tumbling around in a washing machine at times’, university leader tells MPs
       
  
      Dundee bailout could set precedent for government intervention but new pots of money could come with strings attached, event hears
       
  
      Money for ailing institution via Scottish Funding Council comes on top of the ?22 million previously made available
       
  
      Annual reports paint 2024 as a year of reprieve, but expiry of teaching subsidy enhancement ‘will make things tighter’
       
  
      Union members call for new democratic management structure as interim vice-chancellor appointed to lead Scottish institution
       
  
      Institution says it is ‘not immune’ to financial challenges as it looks to axe 400 jobs
       
  
      Government set to resurrect integrity measures, as predatory institutions profit from their competitors’ ‘blood, sweat and tears’
       
  
      The tasks that can be automated or augmented are some of those that university staff undertake day in and day out, says Alexander Iosad
       
  
      Interim vice-chancellor steps down after investigators blame financial crisis on mismanagement, not external pressures
       
  
      Growing numbers of higher education leaders believe their institutions need to change, but only a minority are confident that they can
       
  
      Four in five tertiary education students globally to be in developing world by 2040, World Bank research predicts
       
  
      Foreign student numbers rebound despite fee increases as other anglophone countries impose immigration restrictions
       
  
      Institution falling back on reserve cash to pursue growth through major transformation, including a new teaching model, overseas expansion and controversial staff redundancies
       
  
      Universities call for more support as government rhetoric suggests policy focus shifting to wider tertiary sector
       
  
      Welsh university leader warns of further job losses for professional services staff as politicians probe scale of original cuts
       
  
      Education committee announces inquiry into higher education funding as financial position of sector worsens
       
  
      Annual data shows universities in England and Northern Ireland face growing losses on research and teaching domestic students 
       
  
      Redundancies are being pushed through at many universities even as their accounts attest to relatively robust financial health. But as Labor’s de facto caps on international enrolment start to bite, some suggest that vice-chancellors are right to be prudent. John Ross reports
       
  
      With spending review expected to leave little room to manoeuvre, focus on post-16 agenda worries universities
       
  
      Risk of ‘progressively more destructive patterns of behaviour’ as UK institutions find themselves increasingly ‘boxed in’
       
  
      Savings only part of the motivation for university’s ‘realignment’ to ‘remain relevant’, but union says management wants the humanities ‘burned’
       
  
      Universities eye ‘block teaching’ as way of attracting more students but staff at places that have made the switch warn it is having the opposite effect
       
  
      Students given wrong question and others left without supporting documents, but institution denies impact of voluntary severance programme was to blame
       
  
      Difficult to get new models of collaboration off the ground without ‘transformation funding’, finds efficiencies review
       
  
      Uncertainty over the future of degree apprenticeship funding endangers success of crucial upskilling programme, says Exeter v-c Lisa Roberts
       
  
      Proposal to increase money paid by top US institutions fifteenfold could prove to have deeper impact than more headline-grabbing Trump policies
       
  
      Incoming deputy prime minister casts doubt on plans to boost domestic medical training, saying he is ‘standing up for careful use of taxpayer money’
       
  
      Turnaround in financial fortunes in New South Wales largely driven by growth of wealthy institutions, with others still in deficit
       
  
      Potential reprioritisation of parts of research budget could heap pressure on institutions already counting cost of immigration and tax changes
       
  
      Union threat could prove to be more about ‘propaganda’, with legality of pursuing dispute against education secretary questioned
       
  
      With international students being squeezed, both government and industry must ‘grapple with university funding realities’, according to Carolyn Evans
       
  
      Union fears more than 300 jobs at risk as institution plans to close chemistry and film courses
       
  
      Institution facing ‘significant’ deficit as falling recruitment leaves it unable to cover rising costs
       
  
      Further rowing back on cost-cutting measures end fears that certain languages will no longer be taught in Wales
       
  
      While flurry of approvals raises concerns about the financial viability of offshore outposts, government policies leave ambitious universities with few other choices
       
  
      UK’s biggest academic union eyes showdown with Labour minister as it tries to respond to wave of university cuts
       
  
      VU credits sequential approach to teaching as revenue increases and salary bill drops – but union says it is leading to overwork
       
  
      University proposes 39 job losses in latest sign new wave of cuts will be tougher on staff
       
  
      Hike in fees of up to 6 per cent unlikely to compensate for erosion of research funding and cuts to grant schemes and mobility scholarships
       
  
      Threat of strike ballot still hanging over UK pay talks but expert says low offer will be greeted with ‘sullen resignation’
       
  
      The shock victory of Geert Wilders’ far-right party in the Netherlands’ 2023 election has led to reduced funding for higher education and research, curbs on international student numbers and concerns for academic freedom and the country’s reputation as a research powerhouse. Emily Dixon reports
       
  
      Increased staff and other operating costs blamed for ‘significant deterioration’, with spending on restructuring ballooning
       
  
      Surprise reduction in funding for specialist provision will spark ‘brand new financial crisis brewed entirely in Whitehall’, critics warn
       
  
      Vocabulary driven by policymakers doesn’t work for sector where outputs are not always measurable, conference hears
       
  
      Lowest offer since the pandemic reflects ‘severity of the financial pressures’ facing institutions, says employer body
       
  
      Staff want additional funding allocated by the Welsh government to be used to remove threat of compulsory redundancies
       
  
      Ministers to seek to ensure money used to support high-cost subjects better aligns with priorities for growth
       
  
      Minister says there will be no changes to visa processing regime that gives effect to government’s thwarted cap proposal
       
  
      Latest cost-cutting drives to hit UK sector include planned compulsory redundancies at Bournemouth-based institution
       
  
      Experience Down Under suggests universities should not be too quick to torpedo idea that overseas income should be redistributed
       
  
      All of university’s hourly paid lecturers in social sciences set to go under plans that will affect a quarter of academic workforce
       
  
      Job cuts target drops from initial 400 after university accepts proposals put forward by staff which will see schools ‘teaching higher numbers of students’
       
  
      Student-staff ratios climb to highest level in a decade as universities make cutbacks to avoid plunging into the red
       
  
      Top universities still in robust financial health in year of visa hikes and last-minute withdrawal of proposed foreign enrolment caps
       
  
      Universities set to lose millions in income if government goes ahead with plan to take a cut of overseas earnings, and are unlikely to see much benefit from levy spending, critics say
       
  
      Bentley-driving vice-chancellor George Holmes put on leave after PwC investigation into university payments