Are UK universities struggling financially?

Its not uncommon to hear rumours around campus that universities are struggling for money. So is there any truth behind this story ?

Check out this article from The New Statesmen which sheds light on the issue

Higher education commentators have been warning for years of a looming crisis in university funding. Now, they are beginning to ask which institution will go bankrupt first. Few expect that the government would step in to bail out a university in serious financial difficulty. For one policy expert, it’s already “too late” to avert the oncoming disaster; “all everyone can do now is brace”.

Almost half of UK vice-chancellors expect their university to run at a loss this year. The value of tuition fees for domestic students has been falling in real terms, amid high inflation, since they were frozen in 2017 at £9,250 per year. For reasons that are not at all difficult to understand, almost no one – from politicians to students or their parents – wants to raise them. Universities have increasingly been making up for this shortfall by recruiting students from abroad, who pay dramatically higher fees. And now international student numbers, too, might be falling.

After years of headlines about lowering net migration figures by “clamping down” on foreign students – who were supposedly “squeezing out” their UK counterparts from university places – it is now being realised just how dependent domestic students are on this subsidy. At many of Britain’s leading universities, more than half of their income from fees comes from international students. According to modelling by the accountancy firm PwC, a 20-percentage-point drop in international student enrolment next year could send four-fifths of English and Northern Irish universities into deficit. Early admissions data suggests that the number of overseas enrolments has fallen by more than a third.

At the time of writing, 44 universities – over a quarter of the sector – have announced staff redundancy programmes. At Goldsmiths, University of London, the University and College Union (UCU) warns that a quarter of all academic roles could be cut under a proposed restructuring programme, with some departments losing half of their staff.

With wearying inevitability, cuts will be borne disproportionately by arts, humanities and social sciences departments. Some will doubtlessly cheer the trimming of supposedly “low-value” subject areas. They may be less enthusiastic about the knock-on effect their demise would have on more expensive to teach science and technology subjects, or the wider impact of rapid restructuring in a sector that supports more than three quarters of a million jobs and contributes £130bn to the economy.

For academics, morale is at an all-time low. The prospect of further job losses follows on from years of falling pay, unmanageable workloads and increasingly precarious working conditions, as well as a five-year-long industrial dispute over proposed pension cuts in the Universities Superannuation Scheme (USS). Many of those who took part in the UCU marking boycott over the summer of 2023 faced punitive wage deductions, with some universities deducting 100 per cent of pay.

For students, the outlook is little better. While their fees have been frozen, their cost of living certainly has not. Housing and transport costs are spiralling; research conducted by the National Union of Students suggests that one in ten students are accessing food banks. Academic job cuts will mean less choice and more uncertainty, with courses set to be cancelled or restructured with little notice. And regardless of the losses universities incur for each UK student they teach, students still leave with astronomical debts. The terms of their loan repayments have been, and may continue to be, subject to huge retrospective changes.

But perhaps the worst problem of all for universities is just how bad we are at talking about them. For decades, the prevailing tenor of political and media debate has been to hector universities: “Behave like a market! No, not like that!” Time and again, governments have been astonished by the unintended – though widely predicted – consequences of their legislation. Almost no one with a substantial public platform seems to have an adequate grasp of the structure of higher education or the way it is financed.

Predictably in these circumstances, the wider public fails to understand how universities work, or how they are funded. Instead, they are given an incessant stream of manufactured outrage about content warnings, student radicals, left-wing lecturers and moral panics about threatened statues or portraits of the monarch in common rooms. On the one hand, the government’s “free-speech tsar” proposes that students should “consent to be harmed” by the content of their courses. On the other, journalists single out the recipients of grants for supposedly unworthy research projects. “Big Woke” is apparently diverting huge sums of taxpayer money “towards hard left ideology”, according to the journalist Charlotte Gill, who has been tweeting screenshots of publicly funded projects on, say, “The politics of the English grain trade, 1314-1815”. (Funded value: £879,525.)

“Do we think it’s a crisis? No, we do not,” said the Science Secretary and former universities minister Michelle Donelan in March, when asked about concerns over university funding. (Ministerial churn is a compounding problem for university planning – there have been ten ministers of state responsible for higher education in ten years.) Donelan’s predecessor as universities minister, Chris Skidmore, characterises the situation differently: “What we’re seeing now is obviously the dying days of a party that is likely to lose power, flailing around, trying to scrape the bottom of the barrel with some messaging that is divisive… Sometimes they say, ‘Yes, we’ve got the best universities in the world.’ Well, you’re about to destabilise the best universities in the world with your policies.”

This has all become so exhaustingly familiar. For all that, we are no less unprepared for what is coming, nor closer to an alternative vision for how to keep those world-leading universities in business.

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Do you think they are any actions that can be taken to address these concerns?

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Now that the level of tuition fees is such that it doesn’t cover the cost of teaching arts and humanities courses, let alone the expensive subjects like the sciences, engineering and medicine, universities are left with only one choice - international students, where there is no fee cap and where there is a ready market of students whose families are willing to pay.

This has created its own set of problems, of course, not the least of which is the move by institutions higher up the league tables into expanding the “cheaper” subjects in order to attract students whose fees will cross-subsidise the “bench” subjects. This leaves other institutions nowhere to go.

At the same time, the rhetoric against international students has the effect of dampening down demand for courses at UK universities, especially from cultures where students (especially at postgraduate level) wish to bring their families to the UK whilst they study.

It is, frankly, a mess - and we can expect to see more than one UK university become financially insolvent in the not-too-distant future.

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what can they do to address these issues?

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Yeah, my university (Coventry) is in the gutters. After Brrexit, it has lost many international students, which made a huge impact on uni’s finances

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I’ve been hearing some rumours around campus about universities facing financial struggles, but I didn’t realise the situation was this dire wow.

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One thing that would help is if the government made it easier and incentivised more international students to come to the UK. Brexit has certainly made the process more difficult for international students to come from the EU, The recent decision to stop international students from bringing families over is also having a great impact. The government has done this to cut legal migration, to try and create the perception that they are cutting migration as a whole. In reality these families bring a lot of money into the UK and UK universities.

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I think the government need to make it easier for international students to come to the UK.

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@Cbealby17 - your point is well made. This situation reflects the decisions made by the UK government relating to tuition fees and immigration policy going back 10 years.

The UK HE system is a significant source of export earnings (that’s what international students’ tuition fees are) but this is under threat due to incoherent government policy.

Not holding my breath for this getting any better any time soon.

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As students, it’s important for us to stay informed about these issues that directly impact our education and future.
What steps do you think universities should take to address the financial challenges they are facing, especially considering the potential impact on students and academic staff?

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Yeah, but so far i haven’t seen any impovement from their side :upside_down_face:

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@sienna - you’ll find this video interesting:

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thank you!

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Thank you for sharing this! Was quite informative🙏

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Just to add these two (linked) threads in a related discussion elsewhere. UK university education is falling apart.

Today I, a lecturer, gave up.

I don’t even know where to begin.

I’ve lurked on this sub for a while, mostly because I’m interested in what my students might be facing in their day to day lives. Recently, there have been a series of high-profile posts made about the state of Masters level education, in particular relating to the quality of international students. My post is about this same topic.

I started lecturing in business management at a mid-ranked (top 30) university in 2015. Since then my experience with the university and students has been utterly shocking.

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Feel like I got scammed by my Uni

Just wanted to share what’s been going on with my Master’s journey in London since last September. Initially, I was all geared up for data-driven design, but then came the bombshell—the program got suspended just weeks before it was supposed to start. With deadlines having passed for accepting other programmes, I had to quickly pivot and pick another program at the institute.

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Thank you so much for sharing these🙏

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