University funding/finances
Office for Students registration process alone cost sector combined £2 million, according to unpublished UUK report
Experts fear approach could give government an incentive to cut aid and could lock graduates in to big repayments
2020 federal spending plan boosts student aid and research spending
Strikes notwithstanding, more pay restraint and greater pensions contributions from UK staff seem unavoidable, writes Bernard Casey
Representative body presses case for education and research spending, as Canberra slashes budget projections
Skilful management has delivered growth most industries ‘would die for’, but new analysis asks whether this can last
Initiative aims to expand the debate about endowments beyond divestment to wider social responsibilities
Political, economic and demographic considerations all suggest that the demand-driven system won’t endure, says Nick Hillman
Australia's top-ranked university joins growing list of institutions trading off the innate commercial value of their land
Campuses are being physically repaired but questions remain over whether trust can be restored among staff and students
Senate passing of bill on funding for minority colleges adds requirement on sharing tax data
Huge deficits emerge as universities start to publish 2018-19 accounts – but impact will be reversed next year
Critics fear initiative could widen social inequalities
Sector leaders say Augar-inspired cut to tuition fees in England would damage sector
Newcastle posts £44 million deficit after one-off USS charge, but sector’s results expected to rebound next year
Administrator ‘shocked’ that school was being used as ‘scapegoat’ during political turmoil
The EU’s next framework programme, Horizon Europe, is due to start in just over a year. But while its broad shape is settled, political wrangling over budget and participation rights means researchers are still unclear over their future funding prospects. David Matthews reports from Brussels
Fees reform has not quelled popular anger over exploitation, but academics can play a key role in constitutional reform, says Robert Funk
£9,000 fees permitted per-student funding to rise even at the height of austerity, argues former minister David Willetts
Announcement by new government given cautious welcome by academics – although questions remain over funding and political independence
Leading sociologist of inequality fears boosting the status of a select few universities could mean a closed educational elite, as in the US or France
The competition among 20 Georgian institutions for international medical students raises a host of quality concerns, says Michèle Wera
Delays in the name of political PR ‘forcing academics overseas’
Revolt by four-year campuses in US shows challenge of expanding federal role
Analysts say added flexibility is welcome but question how horse-trading scheme would work
New figures raise question of whether government has thwarted progress on its own policy priority
Federal institutions vow to fight back against Jair Bolsonaro’s restrictive policies
Alberta joins Ontario in cutting university funding and hiking tuition fees
While some universities are funding huge building projects out of international student fees, an increasing number in Australia and elsewhere are finding that the ground beneath their feet is the best foundation for reaching to the sky. But should universities really be swapping ivory towers for commercial skyscrapers? John Ross cranes his neck and wonders
Scheme means universities can spend levy money on own training for lecturers instead of seeing it claimed by government
Julie Bishop tells Times Higher Education interview that Australia’s universities should rank better
Coalition finally succeeds in dispatching the nest egg it initiated last decade
Constitutional Council decision could strike a blow against expansion plan for international students and grandes écoles’ fees policy
Experts sceptical of free-college methods, but welcome party-wide commitment for 2020 poll
Ucea report suggests more direct methods of reining in staff spending are being used amid financial pressure
Hundred-year loans offer US universities big benefits, some risk, and queasiness
The volatility of current affairs means that the old certainties about how to identify receptive markets are gone, says Anna Esaki-Smith
Universities should offer a safety net for recent graduates forced into menial work by financial circumstances, says Roy Celaire
Focus on graduate employment means universities will be judged on an issue over which they have limited control
New Social Democrat administration drops annual 2 per cent saving target, but could end teaching subsidy for humanities and social sciences
Funding challenges need cooperative spirit among educators, finance officers say
Julia Buckingham also aims to protect funding, as response to Augar review is debated
Graduate employment given double the weighting of other metrics in TEF-style assessments
History suggests that universities will lure students with the chance to repay fees via post-graduation work, says Peter Brady
Chris Skidmore says Augar review recommendation to cut tuition fees in England would lead to university closures
A cross-continental push to improve Europe’s best universities will make them more globally competitive, says Jan Palmowski
As governments around the world increasingly look to follow US states’ lead and link university funding to the recruitment, retention and employability of students, Paul Basken surveys the results of the Wall Street Journal/Times Higher Education US College Rankings 2020 for clues about the strategy’s effectiveness
Weeks after Trump vow to strengthen HBCUs, key Republican senator causes row by tying funding to wider HE legislation
University study centre ‘positive’ on Islam but not Christianity, objects senior Department of Education official
One in 12 students now pays to go private in Germany, attracted by ‘niche’ courses, smaller classes and flexible learning schedules
English universities may have shifted towards low-cost subjects under £9K fee regime, ‘exacerbating’ inefficiency in the system, say economists
A policy to recruit genuinely the brightest and best students would have to look beyond revenue maximisation
Trump adviser plans multi-agency tour of universities confused by crackdown
Contrition helps actress who paid to get answers changed on her daughter's SAT
Caitlin Zaloom considers how we can prevent escalating fees from tying students to their parents well into adulthood
Brexit, domestic funding threats and declining public trust could conspire to undermine a critical national asset, says Louise Richardson
Domestic students benefit for now as foreign classmates cancel out provincial budget cuts
Chancellor’s omission of any mention of post-18 review cements impression that plans for fee cut are dead
New strategy advocates a hybrid version of demand-driven funding, but acknowledges it is a long-term proposition
Betting the farm on international students is a gamble – but what’s the alternative? asks THE’s Asia-Pacific editor John Ross