University funding/finances
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
Fourth edition of ‘very effective’ programme will look more closely at recruitment processes and science disciplines
Steve West also calls on politicians to ‘get serious’ about solution to declining university funding
If government sets clear ambitions, innovation follows from the private sector and charities – not the other way round, says Ian Walker
Consensus with regions and reversals by parliament’s budget committee help keep coalition promises
Open letter signed by more than 2,000 documents numerous issues with new finance systems – and calls for leaders to take responsibility
Increasingly international universities want to push native-language brain drain up the political agenda, despite their rescue from ‘freefall’ by a recent funding top-up
Ministries and rectors in Austria and Slovakia are yet to reach agreements on the extra funding needed to cover surging costs
The mature student specialist’s renowned politics department could become part of the solution rather than the problem, says Matthew Flinders
Cash-strapped institutions closing early for Christmas and moving teaching online, but face backlash from policymakers and students
Always left holding the wrong end of the stick, independent institutions hope for a ‘reset’ from the misleadingly named universities accord
Responding to Laurentian crisis, proposal moving through federal Senate would bar public universities from creditor protection, but with only a promise of unspecified alternatives
A sunny outlook on student enrolments is marred by the persistent lack of money for research in the field, says association chair
While India’s prestigious IITs flex fundraising muscle, others in sector are ‘left in the lurch’
Populist right-wing leader leaves office with public universities facing bankruptcy and country polarised
Concerns over more rigid control of universities and fear of isolationist thinking causing ‘intellectual impoverishment’ for East and West
Policymakers will need to work out exactly what ‘equity’ means before entrenching it in new funding arrangements
The new prime minister’s orthodoxy will prevent a repeat of the Iron Lady’s raid on the science and higher education budgets, says Terence Kealey
London’s ‘American’ university says move will offer ‘more transparency and greater value for money’
Companies reported to have suspended orders from university due to delay in paying invoices
After granting general forgiveness of up to $20,000, administration completes regulatory process to further ease burden of federal educational loans
While students with deferred loans are insensitive to price signals, new study suggests that universities are just as unresponsive
Students plan nationwide protests as experts dismiss claim that freed-up places will be taken up by Norwegian nationals
Regional Australian universities’ fears of losing ‘equity’ enrolments to city rivals prove unfounded
Universities must tackle issues that ‘reduce enthusiasm for investment’ to defend teaching and research budgets ‘inevitably under threat’, says Iain Mansfield
Up to 50 staff at wealthier Australian institutions out-earn the average English vice-chancellor, FOI documents reveal
Government expects international enrolment to fall by 70 per cent after introduction of tuition fees for students from outside the EU
Australian analysis finds that the architects of new policies should think more about unintended consequences such as the level of student debt
Staff down tools as pay and university funding alike drift well behind inflation
French ministry wants universities to use unallocated funds to cover up to 500 per cent increases in energy costs
As legal challenge gains, Congress avoids renewing provision seen letting elite campuses tie financial offers to student ability to pay
Biden administration comes to the party, as cash-strapped regional institution seeks new ‘development partners’
Philip Augar issues warning on LLE, but Lord Willetts fears new government ‘would like to’ restrict higher education entry
Republican-led jurisdictions join private borrower in court claims citing tax losses and other harms from $300 billion giveaway
Writing off student debt can encourage people to complete their degrees and work in the sectors they have trained for, says Danny Bielik
International students add hugely to the richness of universities. But are the risks of relying on their fees to subsidise so much fully understood?
Embracing the concept just as many other US campuses back away, top-ranked school school hopes for lawyers who pursue public service
SOAS director rails against ‘unjustly’ high mark-up on UK fees for overseas learners
Shadow chancellor promises to reinstate top rate of income tax to fund ‘biggest expansion of medical school places ever’
Status quo ‘not sustainable’ for universities or students and even Tory government ‘will recognise that soon’, shadow minister says
Disappointment as ‘mini budget’ contains no new commitments on research funding or support for students
Research support must be realistic, the cost of educating UK students must be properly met, and overseas students remain welcome, says Ian Walmsley
Some doubt government will really lavish foundation-governed universities with extra funding it has promised
As biggest member state centralises power while failing to pay its dues, the headwinds battering the pan-regional university are getting a whole lot stronger
Nearly two years after pursuit of controversial and costly insolvency process, Ontario institution sees pathway to recovery
Government accused of moving goalposts over pre-election messaging, with social sciences and business master’s also set to lose out
Prime minister says researchers should be able to work ‘without looking over their shoulder’
Recovery has a way to go, analysts insist, as signs point both north and south