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French universities warn budget fails to fix ongoing woes

New measures only offer temporary relief as state resources fail to keep pace with rising student numbers and increased costs, say leaders

Published on
February 12, 2026
Last updated
February 13, 2026
Source: iStock/HJBC

French universities have warned that the government鈥檚 much-delayed budget fails to address long-standing financial pressures, leaving many institutions in deficit and struggling to maintain teaching and research standards.

鈥淭he financial situation of French universities is worrying and聽structurally fragile,鈥 said Dean Lewis, the president of the聽University of Bordeaux. 鈥淒espite an increase in student聽numbers and expanded missions, the resources聽allocated have not kept pace.鈥

The country鈥檚 state budget was passed last week after a months-long political deadlock in the parliament, where president Emmanuel Macron鈥檚 government lacks a majority. Prime minister Sebastien Lecornu invoked special constitutional powers that allow the government to pass a bill without a vote, in order to push the budget through parliament.

Under the new measures, the overall budget of the Ministry of 糖心Vlog and Research will rise by 鈧350 million (拢304 million), according to a government press release, with the broader university and research mission receiving a 鈧725 million increase. It also includes 鈧1 lunches for students and higher doctoral stipends.

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But university leaders say the increase does not fully offset energy bills, inflation and聽increased staff salaries. 鈥淎lthough certain聽measures may provide temporary relief, they do not fully meet the long-term needs of聽universities,鈥 Lewis explained.

鈥淭his restrictive budgetary framework limits the ability of聽institutions to invest, adapt their programmes or provide adequate support to students,聽particularly in the most strained fields.鈥

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Anne Fra茂sse, president of Paul Val茅ry University Montpellier 3, said the biggest pressure comes from payroll costs, adding that the political uncertainty around the state budget had forced universities into short-term survival mode which has even led to degree programmes being discontinued.

鈥淭he consequences are also significant in terms of staff workload and this has led to a deterioration in the quality of working life,鈥 she said.

Etienne Bordes, a lecturer in contemporary history at Universit茅 Paris-Est Cr茅teil, said universities in France remain dependent on the state budget and have few funding alternatives.

鈥淭he entire sector is affected by this insufficient budget, both in terms of research grants and teaching positions that are not being replaced, and construction projects that have been halted,鈥 he added.

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Bordes said the current situation French universities face was reminiscent of the economic crises of the early 1990s.

鈥淎lmost all universities are running a budget deficit, believing themselves unable to fulfil their missions within the framework of the resources allocated by the state,鈥 he explained. 鈥淭his situation is leading to a freeze on investment and recruitment, which has dramatic short-, medium-, and long-term consequences for the quality of research and education.鈥

Bordeaux鈥檚 Lewis said funding should be more transparent and sustainable and more resources should be allocated to universities so that they could fulfil the missions they were expected to deliver. 聽

鈥淯niversities need increased core funding, indexed to student numbers and inflation, in order聽to cover their fixed costs,鈥 he said.

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seher.asaf@timeshighereducation.com

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