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PRIVACY
Opinion

The financial crisis facing Welsh universities

it is imperative that the new Welsh Government now undertakes an urgent review of the future of our universities

University graduates(Image: PA Wire/PA Images)

What is the future of universities? That is the question many have been asking as a financial crisis engulfs the sector across the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ.

With home student fees frozen since 2017, universities have focused on attracting more overseas students who can be charged as much as four times more to study than º£½ÇÊÓÆµ students.

While this has led to a surge in international student recruitment in the last five years, recent changes in visa regulations have brought this money-making operation to a sudden halt with a recent study showing that overseas enrolment in postgraduate-taught courses had decreased by 44%. At the same time, at least 45 universities have announced staff redundancies or course closures in the last few weeks.

And what about Wales? The latest financial accounts of Welsh universities show that while the overall income from full-time home students has dropped by £16 million between 2022 and 2023, that from overseas students has gone up by £44m.

As a result, the financial dependency on international fees in Welsh higher education has increased to 30% of all student income in 2023 (or £312m). This means that even a moderate decrease in the international market will have severe financial repercussions.

And there are differences across the sector – while Cardiff, Swansea, Bangor, and Aberystwyth universities have collectively had a 6% growth in overseas income in the last year, post-1992 institutions such as the University of South Wales, Wrexham University, University of Wales Trinity St David’s, and Cardiff Metropolitan University have together seen an increase of 43% over the same period.

The situation seems to be most acute at the University of South Wales (USW). Whilst it managed to attract an additional £15m in overseas fees in the last year, it also experienced a fall of £9m in home fees, the largest decrease of any university in Wales. In 2019, only 11% of its income came from overseas, but this had increased to 32% (or £48m) by 2023 thus ensuring that USW’s finances are now firmly entwined with persuading more international students to enrol.

Unfortunately, and as this column pointed out last year, most of its overseas intake originates from Nigeria, India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, and Sri Lanka where students were most likely to bring their families with them to the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ. But with the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ Government now banning dependents from accompanying taught postgraduate students, it in inevitable that numbers will fall dramatically, leading to a serious financial problem for the university.