探花视频

Ministers urged to ready response to major university going bust

Serious financial concerns at a handful of English universities over potential breaches of banking covenants

Published on
December 21, 2023
Last updated
December 21, 2023
A stranded galleon is approached by a tugboat
Source: Alamy

There are suggestions of serious financial concerns at a handful of English universities worried about breaching their banking covenants, with government made aware of the situation, as ministers are urged to recognise that 鈥渁 major university going bust would be a very real difficulty for everybody鈥, including themselves.

The funding crisis 鈥 combining real-terms cuts in funding for domestic students under the frozen fee cap with early signs of a fall in overseas student numbers 鈥撀爄s now having聽an acute impact.聽There are suggestions in the sector that a small number of institutions are concerned about the possibility of breaching their covenants on borrowing with their banks, which require institutions to maintain certain levels of financial performance.

Breaching covenants could leave an institution unable to class itself in its accounts as a 鈥済oing concern鈥, able to meet its financial obligations for the next 12 months.

Until now, the sole message on potential institutional failures from government and the English regulator, the Office for Students, has been that there will be no 鈥渂ailouts鈥 for universities. But the level of financial challenge across the sector and complexity of a potential major university failure requires a fuller strategy from government, according to senior figures.

探花视频

ADVERTISEMENT

John Rushforth, executive secretary of the Committee of University Chairs, which represents heads of UK governing bodies, said that while support from the government or regulator for a university with 鈥渢emporary cash-flow鈥 issues might be relatively straightforward, the situation could be more complex 鈥渋f it鈥檚 a large institution and it鈥檚 a more systemic failure because the market isn鈥檛 there and the demand isn鈥檛 there鈥he squeeze on fees hasn鈥檛 been made up from overseas activity and there鈥檚 no prospect of that happening鈥.

鈥淧art of the problem will then be breach of bank covenants,鈥 said Mr Rushforth, former chief auditor at the Higher Education Funding Council for England. 鈥淵ou will have a very clear decision to be made by the governing body when they come to do the financial accounts 鈥 these discussions are already happening 鈥 with people talking to their auditors about whether they [the university] are a going concern. Because clearly if they keep trading when they know they are going bankrupt that opens them up [governing bodies] potentially to some legal liability.鈥

探花视频

ADVERTISEMENT

Mr Rushforth added: 鈥淚f we get to the position where, let鈥檚 say, a major institution goes bust, there is a very real difficulty for everybody.鈥

He highlighted the obstacles to transferring students to a different profile of university in the same city, or to a similar profile of university in a different city; the need for some entity to foot the bill for students鈥 additional costs if they move; questions around what would happen to a failed university鈥檚 pension liabilities; and issues around the impact for graduates with degrees from universities that no longer existed.

Mr Rushforth聽added 鈥渋f nothing is done鈥 by government in the event of an institutional failure, banks 鈥渨ould take fright and that will probably put up the cost of credit for every institution in the sector鈥.

鈥淚n the event of failure there is no current framework that means priority is given to student interests. Instead it will be creditors that are put first,鈥 Mr Rushforth said.

探花视频

ADVERTISEMENT

鈥淣obody expects anybody to be bailed out. But there will have to be a [government] response because I think it would be really politically challenging to leave 20,000 students in limbo with nobody able to sort them out.鈥

Bob Rabone, a former chair of the British Universities Finance Directors Group, said breach of banking covenants by a university would lead at the very least to 鈥渄ialogue with the lender鈥, resulting in 鈥渁n agreement on financial performance improvements over an acceptable period to correct the breach鈥.

鈥淥nly in the almost unheard-of event that a path cannot be agreed, would the borrower聽need to put in place arrangements that repay the borrowing,鈥 he added.

Sector leaders highlight early signs of a fall in overseas student recruitment and warn that with a government review of the graduate visa route under way, ministers must not deepen the problems even further.

探花视频

ADVERTISEMENT

Vivienne Stern, chief executive of Universities UK, said that while university leaders are 鈥渄oing things to right the ship鈥overnment should not be complacent鈥.

鈥淚nstitutions are in this position not because they are poorly managed, but because a range of factors, some of which are in government鈥檚 control, are combining to create an impossible operating environment,鈥 she said.

探花视频

ADVERTISEMENT

鈥淕overnment鈥檚 absolute responsibility must be, first, not to make things worse; second, to appreciate that should there be an institutional failure the consequences would be really serious, not just for the university and its students, but for the town or city that it鈥檚 in.鈥

john.morgan@timeshighereducation.com

Register to continue

Why register?

  • Registration is free and only takes a moment
  • Once registered, you can read 3 articles a month
  • Sign up for our newsletter
Please
or
to read this article.

Related articles

Reader's comments (5)

Sorry, we only bail out banks.
That's what happens when a country engages in price fixing - HE institutions start collapsing.
Is there anything this govt can't mess up?
Anyone have any ideas which universities are at risk?
All are at risk in different ways depending upon their income/expenditure balance, debt ratios, covenants, and staffing costs. Some will be able to part mitigate the risk others less likely. This situation has been commented on over the last 18 months. We have the perfect storm to navigate and we are likely to need to find new solutions.

Sponsored

Featured jobs

See all jobs
ADVERTISEMENT