University funding/finances
Survey of more than 5,000 students fuels debate about cross-subsidies in English higher education
Hepi report warns that surge in youth population and higher participation will add to government’s funding headache in England
To survive, UK universities must think far beyond educational products and their own narrow institutional interests, says Mike Boxall
The Republic of Ireland’s embrace of differentiated national missions for institutions offers international lessons, says Ellen Hazelkorn
The Pensions Regulator, not universities, is the driving force behind proposed cuts due to its nonsensical approach to discount rates, argue David Bailey and John Clancy
Academic sleuths have used investigative skills and Twitter to tell the real story behind proposed pension cuts, says Sherrill Stroschein
Universities anticipate much greater scrutiny of teaching outcomes, potentially even ‘peer review’ of lectures
Former president warns that scrapping fees will lead to high dropout rates and challenges of capacity
Universities need to confront, rather than ignore, uncomfortable questions about the worth of higher education to be in with a fighting chance
Outgoing vice-chancellor reflects on four years in what many regard as English higher education’s toughest job
The government is wrong to portray campus surpluses as ‘slush funds’, says expert
Federal structure has led to ‘expansion based purely on regional political interests’, says report
Too many partisan board members are causing the university pensions dispute to drag on, says Adrian Bell
But Labor’s Tanya Plibersek fuels concerns that funding could be diverted to further education
Privatisation or nationally funded consortia are the only solutions to US public education’s financial malaise, says Sheldon H. Jacobson
Academics raise concerns over the priorities of international development agencies
Don’t blame university support staff for not joining the strike over pensions – it is because too often they are left out of the conversation, says Fiona Whelan
Warwick's vice-chancellor Stuart Croft explains how radical government action might help to avert the pensions strike affecting half of all UK universities
Achieving the prime minister’s goal of reshaping post-18 education will require another shake-up of sector regulation, warn experts
Group of Eight chair aims to demonstrate that the benefits of higher education outweigh the costs
Labor wants further and higher education to be ‘equally attractive’ to prospective students
Survey results emerge amid mounting criticism of government’s hopes of delivering greater price competition
Market forces unleashed on the UK university sector have pushed up senior pay, fuelled the rows over it and posed questions about ‘value for money’ that are shaping the future of universities
Andrew McRae explores what effects the value debate could have on the structure of the sector
Our annual pay review details v-cs’ remuneration, explores the make-up and workings of the governing bodies that set it, and compares the rewards on offer with those of other sectors
Murky cross-subsidy between university courses must be addressed by the government’s review of higher education funding, argues David Robinson
Former education secretary Justine Greening explains her plans for a graduate contribution system that funds universities in the same way that national insurance covers state pensions
The Times Higher Education editorial team discusses the UK's long-awaited higher education funding review
The University of Essex’s vice-chancellor explains why he disagrees with Universities UK’s position on USS pension reform
Aim is to preserve 'the best of the system we have' while making funding fairer, universities minister tells THE
Students unlikely to be won over by tweaks to current funding arrangements, says sector leader
London Economics modelling suggests that higher earners would be the primary beneficiaries of many potential reforms
Prime minister to express concern that England ‘has one of the most expensive systems of university tuition in the world’
Ahead of the prime minister’s speech on reforming university funding, Charles B. W. Prince suggests four routes to improving student finance
Damian Hinds says he would like to see degree ‘options available which have different costs’
Treasury Committee says government has failed to justify why student loan interest rates should exceed those prevailing in the market
Additional support for institutions could be co-funded by national governments and the European Union, say rectors
Analysis of government data reveals that Australian universities’ surpluses have effectively halved over the past six years, says Conor King
Lower sticker price for degrees would do nothing to help poorer students, says London Economics analysis
Rare disciplines face a multitude of threats but are key to the biodiversity of academia, advocates say
President Meric Gertler says move will boost international numbers at university whose urban location shapes its profile and research activities
Higher education expert warns that widening access could suffer if funding for financial aid is eroded
Committee chair Robert Halfon calls for universities to offer more technical degrees or lose state funding
Devolved administration’s move puts pressure on Westminster government to confirm post-Brexit arrangements in England
Universities South Africa head says it is too early to say whether institutions will successfully roll out new system
Infrastructure plans at English universities may be derailed by credit downgrade and loss of access to European Investment Bank, says regulator
Canadian scientists’ impressive campaign for increased basic science funding risks splintering as victory looms, says Jim Woodgett
Denmark is not receiving repayments from 40 per cent of EU loan recipients from 2016
Aston University head warns mooted cuts to tuition fees in England will only benefit wealthiest graduates
Institutional leaders tell survey that current avalanche of criticism ‘lacks substance’
The government’s unilateral move to rein in costs is the inevitable result of a volatile and emotive political climate, says Warren Bebbington
Cabinet reshuffle offers universities the chance of a relationship reset before they are likely caught in the first swell of a global wave of funding reviews
Ibero-American University of Science and Technology closed after an investigation found the institution to have debts of about 4 billion pesos
More than half of new budget will go to the University of Luxembourg
Ongoing ministerial education reviews risk treating technical and academic education as separate pathways, says Quintin McKellar, and this could be to the detriment of both
Privately run vocational courses likely to be big beneficiaries of Gratuidad, which supports poorer students
With students paying higher fees and expecting better facilities, UK universities must find sustainable ways to increase capital expenditure, says Philip Stephenson
Economics scholar estimates impact of new excise tax on university endowments
Hollie Chandler urges ministers not to underestimate the true contribution of international students to the UK
The latest edition of Times Higher Education discussed by the editorial team