Rapid expansion of some universities ‘over-optimistic’ – Stern

Institutions reliant on cross-subsidy model need to learn how to adapt to policy changes more quickly, says Universities UK chief

Published on
January 21, 2026
Last updated
January 21, 2026
Source: iStock/Jarama

Some UK universities were “over-optimistic” and expanded too quickly during the recent boom in international student numbers, according to the chief executive of Universities UK, who said that “massive reliance” on the cross-subsidy model was leaving institutions exposed.

In conversation with journalist Amol Rajan at the Bett conference, Vivienne Stern said overseas fee income was now critical to sustaining core provision for UK students, after public funding failed to keep pace with rising costs.

This “unwise” dependence has left universities particularly vulnerable to political and economic shocks, Stern said, as international students have become increasingly entangled in immigration debates and global competition for mobile learners.

Pressures created by the funding model are contributing to course closures, including in subjects central to national skills needs, she added. “We’ve seen contraction in subjects which to me seems kind of counter-intuitive like chemistry, English literature,” she said, adding that modern foreign languages are also disappearing as demand falls.

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Stern described the current climate as “a pretty difficult environment” across all four UK nations. “I’ve never seen anything like it in my career,” she said.

“It doesn’t mean that every university is on the edge of financial disaster,” Stern stressed. “They’re all having to paddle very, very hard underneath the surface to make sure that they’re able to discharge their kind of fundamental job.”

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She acknowledged that some institutions had worsened their position by expanding too quickly. Universities were “over-optimistic” about overseas demand and “the investments they made”, Stern said, adding that some were now failing to respond quickly enough as conditions change.

“The biggest thing you can charge universities that find themselves in real trouble with right now is not moving fast enough,” Stern said, stressing the need for greater agility as demographics and policy priorities shift.

From 2030 onwards, she warned, universities will face a fall in the 18-year-old population because of declining birth rates.

Against this backdrop, Stern questioned the feasibility of Labour’s new participation ambition, which replaces the former 50 per cent target with a goal that two-thirds of the population should hold a qualification at level 4 and above.

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Although the change has been presented as a cut in numbers, Stern said it was actually a “massive expansion” and an “ambitious” aim.

Stern also said it was notable how little public backlash there had been to the government’s decision to raise tuition fees in line with inflation. “It is surprising,” she said, adding that she believed “the government was a bit surprised too, that’s why they were careful”.

“But it’s not done yet,” she added. “The government has to legislate to make the inflationary uplift automatic, and I suspect there will be more scrutiny then.

She said universities should argue that the fee wasn’t going up, it was keeping pace with inflation and cautioned against larger increases.

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“I don’t think that the government should put the fee up by more than inflation, because we’ve pretty much reached the limit of what graduates – thinking about future earnings – see as a reasonable deal. It’s a big investment. You pay a 9 per cent contribution through tax above the threshold, and that affects the money you have to live your life.

“If we’re not careful, we put off students who should and would benefit from going to university because they’re worried about the deal.”

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tash.mosheim@timeshighereducation.com

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Reader's comments (3)

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The tories completely broke the system by forcing it to go full market Now we’re not educating our own population adequately. No idea how if it can be fixed
"Stern also said it was notable how little public backlash there had been to the government’s decision to raise tuition fees in line with inflation". Yes I think this is true but misleading. The backlash has been incorporated into the general, inceasingly powerful, criticism of the fee system in total and the rates if interest charged. While attending university is now the default for the age group, in fact most graduates and students were and are blithley unaware ofwehat this will mean for their future finances and the lvels of taxation they will face. The new estimates I have seen are staggering. Their predicament has been significantly exacerbated by the government's decision to continue to raise additional taxes by freezing already punitive tax thresholds for the general taxpayer. This has a real impact on student loan payments and debt which is not being highlighted. People are now also writing about a £500bn student debt crisis in the making that will have to be addressed at some stage. So I think there is a real backlash about the student loan system generally, rather than focused on the recent modest raise. The absence of concern about the increase is thus no cause for complacency, in fact the reverse in my opinion. The problem is this is one of those systems that after running for awhile become so complex and expensive to reform or abolish, so they just trundle on like Juggernaut's car crushing the bodies of the indebted students and politicians muse that they can just kick this down the line and let the next lot sort it out.

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