University funding and finances
Delft University of Technology report says universities could reduce estates footprint by 25 per cent via more space-sharing
Nick Hillman considers the likelihood of the government taking concrete steps to help postgraduate students before the election
As giving grows in importance, universities need to engage seriously with the topic, says Charles Keidan
Employers respond to 鈥榮care stories鈥 around proposed changes to USS pension scheme
Senior professors express 鈥榦utrage鈥 at Glasgow鈥檚 decision to reduce investment
Education lawyer Smita Jamdar on the danger of piecemeal change to the regulatory regime
Maintaining a stable university income while writing off a third of student loans could save money and win votes, John聽Cater suggests
The University of Huddersfield has been tackled by HM Revenue and Customs over a 拢600,000 鈥渁busive tax avoidance鈥 case dating back more than 10 years.
Former minister warns Labour鈥檚 Liam Byrne that lowering tuition fees will cause him no end of grief
Students who want to do master鈥檚 degrees are stymied by a lack of state finance. Paul Jump investigates how funding can be fixed
鈥楪oing private鈥 is no financial panacea, say Barry Glassner and Morton Schapiro
Universities are set to increase investment in their estates despite growing financial uncertainty, a new survey shows
Tuition fees are rising for overseas students. If the cap on undergraduate fees is lifted, will they follow suit?
Institution looks for new business model to pay for halls of residence
Scams, defaults, over-optimistic revenue projections: the UK must look to US lessons on student finance, writes Nick Hillman
The chief of the Regional Universities Network on the impact of the Coalition鈥檚 planned reforms
A majority of adults in England support reduced tuition fees for students from lower income families, according to a survey for the Sutton Trust
England urged to learn lessons from country鈥檚 experience of steep rise in undergraduates after relaxation of controls
The opposition must give universities guarantees about funding if it wants to gain support, argues Bill Rammell
Louisiana State University president says some US institutions fear new ratings system because they have been misleading students
Former minister鈥檚 proposal for universities to buy share of student debt has divided opinion
We must return to first principles to develop a fair method of paying for higher education, argues Bahram Bekhradnia
Institutions are exploring how to address the deficit and keep the scheme sustainable, says Anton聽Muscatelli
String of poor decisions preceded suspension of highly trusted status
Alan Ryan considers the size and seriousness of the US student loans 鈥榗risis鈥
Who in our sector has the political will to make the case for state-backed higher education for all, asks Thomas Docherty
Institutions still 鈥榣ag well behind鈥 US counterparts, which are piling on funds
Spiralling costs and frozen domestic income mean that some universities will be 鈥榗ompletely stuffed鈥 within three years, claims Anglia Ruskin leader
University still pays rent and maintenance costs for Ladbroke House and is stuck in lease until 2016
A raft of short-sighted policies are causing harm, says Sir Roderick Floud
Emulate US institutions鈥 efforts to 鈥榮hape lifelong donors鈥 while they are still undergraduates, Case report says
Around 60 University of Oxford academics have used an open letter to demand the institution stops investing in fossil fuel companies.
Minister predicts that in 2050 no one will understand today鈥檚 anxiety over 鈥榮trange figures鈥
As costs soar for students Down Under, England should be even more wary of following the country鈥檚 lead, says Rachel Wenstone
Too many policy experts look to the US and Australia as 鈥渟ome higher education funding nirvana鈥, according to the vice-chancellor who chairs Million+.
Small increase in fundraising staff prompts questions over sector鈥檚 ability to meet 拢2 billion target by 2022
Universities could be allowed to seek cash without asking funding council鈥檚 permission
Look to Ireland, not Australia, to see the damage caused by unfettered recruitment, says Bahram Bekhradnia
David Kemp and Andrew Norton call for state cash for all institutions and pre-bachelor鈥檚 courses
Failure to recruit may lead to lowering of promotional bar
Ryan Shorthouse argues that institutions should play a greater role in financing undergraduate students
UUK to look at what changes would lower cost of system after report reveals meagre savings after fees hike
Policymakers urged to learn lessons from 鈥榓dvanced鈥 overseas model
How are universities faring after the first full year of operating under the 拢9,000 fees regime?
Redundancy talks start as body prepares for loss of grant support by 2017
Years after Thatcher, says Simon Marginson, commerce is marginal to the sector. True competition would destroy its essence
Charges could help to subsidise poor students, says Northwestern University president
Nearly 拢1 billion in state-backed funding will be paid to students at private colleges next year.
If Labour does adopt a graduate tax policy it will be making a grave mistake, says Emran Mian
Johnny Rich on a simple change that could erase student debt, fund universities and boost employability - without costing taxpayers more
Big post-92s suffer as Hefce steers allocations towards strong recruiters
A 拢2.5 billion drop in forecast student loan repayments over six years means the government will 鈥渕assively overrun鈥 on its higher education budget, independent experts have warned
Hitting RAB charge 鈥榯hreshold鈥 will make 拢9,000 system more costly than old
Teaching grants for universities in England are to fall by more than the 拢45 million announced last month, the country鈥檚 funding council has said.
But critics warn of funding eligibility problems in plan to collaborate on projects
David Willetts highlights possible delay in filling extra undergraduate places
UK spending on research and development as a proportion of gross domestic product fell in 2012, according to new figures.
We must press politicians to show how a future government will support the sector, says Christopher Snowden
Willetts hints that 鈥榰nplanned鈥 expansion after cap lifts will be scrutinised
Adding 30,000 extra places will spread teaching funds even thinner, sector figures warn