University funding and finances
  
  
   
  
      
  
  
    
        
  
  
      
            
  
      Stay-at-home students who attend a local university should be eligible for cut-price tuition fees of ?5,000 a year, according to an influential commission of higher education experts
       
  
      Lowering tuition fees to ?6,000 ¨C a policy put forward by Labour - could cost the Treasury the same as the current ?9,000 set-up, a study has claimed.
       
  
      Treatment to avoid cuts would do more harm than good, critics say
       
  
      Alastair?Bonnett visits Lincoln¡¯s Social Science Centre, a cooperative, free university attempting to build a different kind of knowledge economy
       
  
      Less than 10 years since their introduction, tuition fees will soon disappear from the country. Frances Mechan-Schmidt reports
       
  
      Nation likely to lose fruitful position in UK research system, experts say
       
  
      Full disclosure could break competition law, conference hears
       
  
      Institutions consider projects to take advantage of VAT exemption
       
  
      ?9,000 limit poses threat to quality and income, conference hears
       
  
      Universities minister David Willetts has defended the student finance system against criticisms that it is unsustainable and will not bring in the amount of money required to fund the sector long term.
       
  
      Body defends science and social mobility funds from spending review
       
  
      UK universities must form business partnerships to demonstrate the need for public investment. By Elizabeth Gibney
       
  
      Sixteen UK higher education institutions are to benefit from a ?50 million investment in research projects designed to drive economic growth, the universities and science minister has said.
       
  
      The government¡¯s innovation agency the Technology Strategy Board will see a ?50 million boost to its budget this year, the government has announced.
       
  
      V-c believes ¡®radical solution¡¯ is the way to rise up the rankings. John Morgan reports
       
  
      Details have been released about proposals to allow universities in England to win more undergraduate places if they can show they are recruiting strongly.
       
  
      Leader sought to guide Hefce through period of upheaval
       
  
      Fossil Free urges universities to dump holdings in fuel companies
       
  
      Universities are to benefit from a reduced administrative burden in supplying information about their costs, but government pressure to give more of such data to students has met with a cool response.
       
  
      Existing legislation fails to cover Student Loans Company cash
       
  
      The rest of the world thinks so, says Hefce funding chief
       
  
      Geraldine?Van?Bueren says international law could help opponents of rising tuition costs in their battle
       
  
      School pupils from poorer backgrounds could be contacted by the government to nudge them towards applying to university if they get good GCSE grades, David Willetts has said.
       
  
      UUK chief looks to impact to save budget from Augean economy
       
  
      Wales¡¯ institutions gain funds as a result of cross-border flow under new fees regime
       
  
      Gurminder Bhambra supports the students and staff contesting the hollowing-out of the University of Sussex¡¯s collegial ideals
       
  
      Steve?Smith warns of looming budgetary issues that could send institutions off the road
       
  
      It is morally wrong to deny University of Sussex students 24/7 support from flexible, professional campus services, says John Duffy
       
  
      A huge cut to the Australian higher education budget announced just months before the next federal election is the largest since 1996, according to umbrella body Universities Australia.
       
  
      Improved procurement could be the secret to balancing the sector¡¯s books in tough times, Nick Petford and Andy Davies suggest
       
  
      Demise of matched funding leaves majority of institutions worse off. David Matthews reports
       
  
      Report says distribution would change little if based on institutions¡¯ research council income
       
  
      Could a Welsh institution¡¯s success offer insights to help stragglers catch up?
       
  
      Overall funding for Welsh universities is set to increase by 13.6 per cent next academic year.
       
  
      Newcastle University is to launch a new ?7 million centre for undersea and offshore engineering on the site of a famous former shipyard.
       
  
      Better regional R&D strategies needed to access structural funds, sector told.
       
  
      Speculation mounts that reform has diminished leadership role
       
  
      Sir Alan Langlands is to leave his job as chief executive of England¡¯s funding council to become vice-chancellor of the University of Leeds, where he has been welcomed as a ¡°stellar figure¡± in higher education.
       
  
      Tim McInnis, the former director of the alumni relations office at Durham University, has left the institution to join a cancer charity.
       
  
      Austerity a greater threat than Moocs and private providers, writes John Morgan
       
  
      Ministers advised to reverse ban on second degree funding
       
  
      Further shrinkage as funding reforms take fuller effect
       
  
      The English higher education sector last year saw its first real-terms cut in income since records began almost 20 years ago, while institutional finances will take a further hit this year because of the fall in student numbers under higher fees.
       
  
      Universities UK has been asked by David Willetts to undertake a review of part-time study and make urgent recommendations in response to a report which shows a ¡°dramatic decline¡± in part-time students.
       
  
      ¡®Unpredictable outcomes¡¯ of reform require ¡®immediate attention
       
  
      Scholars in arts and humanities departments vulnerable to subsidy cuts are fighting back. John Marcus reports
       
  
      The tuition fee cap will remain at ?9,000 in 2014-15, meaning the government is allowing most universities¡¯ income to be eroded by inflation, while students¡¯ grants for living expenses will be held back with a below-inflation rise.
       
  
      Spending by English universities rose faster than their income did in the year before ?9,000 tuition fees were introduced, while institutions again increased their reliance on fees paid by overseas students.
       
  
      Universities plan cost-sharing groups once VAT exemption rules are clarified. By Jack Grove
       
  
      Further austerity measures could wreak havoc with BIS¡¯ stretched finances
       
  
      Whoever wins the next election, uncapped enrolments and a big student loan book must be addressed, say observers
       
  
      Student accommodation provider UPP has launched its first bond, backed by the income from student residences at five universities.
       
  
      Private university¡¯s new course awaits General Medical Council approval as critics decry projected ?144,000 price
       
  
      Coalition reveals ¡®disturbing¡¯ shortfall. David Matthews reports
       
  
      Welsh universities lead the UK in terms of output quality per pound invested, says report from Learned Society of Wales
       
  
      The Higher Education Policy Institute has mounted a successful drive to recruit more university partners, with the institutions helping to secure the independent thinktank¡¯s long-term future.
       
  
      The short-term benefits to the government of increasing student fees in England will be outweighed 6.5 times over by the long-term costs of the new system, according to a new report.
       
  
      Hepi director predicts more cuts over higher student loan costs
       
  
      US president Barack Obama has said that taxpayers ¡°cannot continue to subsidise higher and higher and higher costs of higher education¡± in his annual State of the Union Address, and published proposals that would require colleges to meet performance thresholds to qualify for federal funding.
       
  
      The next European Union research and innovation programme, Horizon 2020, has been allocated a budget of almost €71 billion (?60.4 billion) in an agreement reached on 8 February.