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Asia University Rankings 2018: results announced

Singapore has the continent鈥檚 best university for the third year in a row but China鈥檚 stars are in the ascendant, says Ellie Bothwell

Published on
February 6, 2018
Last updated
March 21, 2022
Star trails over Tsinghua University in China
Source: Getty
Star trails over Tsinghua University in Beijing, China

Browse the 350+ list of institutions in this year鈥檚 rankings


The National University of Singapore is Asia鈥檚 top university for the third year in a row, according to 探花视频鈥s annual rankings of the region.

Singapore鈥檚 flagship institution holds on to the number one spot in the THE Asia University Rankings 2018 after improving its teaching and research environments, achieving a higher citation impact and securing higher levels of industry income.

Meanwhile, Tsinghua University has overtaken Peking University to become the top Chinese institution in the table for the first time in the rankings鈥 six-year history. Tsinghua has a much stronger publication output than Peking and increased its research income at a faster rate than its Beijing rival.

Overall, China has 63 universities in the rankings, many of which have made progress this year, including several of its lower-ranked institutions.

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However, Japan is once again the most-represented nation in the list, boasting 89 universities.

There is also success for Hong Kong, which has three universities in the top 10, more than any other territory, and six universities in the top 60.

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In Southeast Asia, Malaysia鈥檚 flagship institution, the University of Malaya, joins the top 50 for the first time, and Indonesia has doubled its representation, claiming four spaces in the table, up from two last year.


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But most of Thailand鈥檚 10 institutions have fallen down the table as the country grapples with an ageing population and oversupply of higher education. Taiwan has also suffered declines for these reasons.

Other nations are feeling the competition in the world鈥檚 largest continent. While India, Pakistan, South Korea and Turkey have all increased their overall representation, several of their universities have fallen down the list.

This year鈥檚 table ranks just over 350 universities, up from about 300 last year. These universities come from 25 countries/regions.

ellie.bothwell@timeshighereducation.com


Asia University Rankings 2018: the top 10

Asia University Ranking 2018 Asia University Ranking 2017 Position in World University Rankings 2018 Institution Country/region
1 1 =22 National University of Singapore Singapore
2 3 30 Tsinghua University China
3 2 =27 Peking University China
4 5 40 University of Hong Kong Hong Kong
=5 6 44 Hong Kong University of Science and Technology Hong Kong
=5 4 52 Nanyang Technological University Singapore
7 11 58 Chinese University of Hong Kong Hong Kong
8 7 46 The University of Tokyo Japan
9 9 =74 Seoul National University South Korea
10 8 =95 Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST) South Korea

Browse the full list of institutions in this year鈥檚 rankings


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Visitors look at a bronze sculpture at Tsinghua in Beijing, China


The stars, near and distant

China is putting its financial muscle behind its universities to develop them into international powerhouses 鈥 and other countries are finding it increasingly hard to keep up

In September 2015, researchers made history with the first direct detection of gravitational waves 鈥 a phenomenon predicted by Albert Einstein a hundred years earlier.

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The discovery led to three US scientists being awarded the 2017 Nobel Prize in Physics; the Nobel committee described the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory, or 鈥淟igo鈥, experiment, which detected the waves, as the 鈥渕ost sensitive instrument ever devised by man鈥.

But although just three individuals claimed the Nobel honour, more than 1,000 researchers from over 20 countries had worked on the project since its birth.

Among them was a team of five Chinese scientists from Tsinghua University, who contributed to gravitational wave data analysis using advanced computing technologies to help 鈥減urify鈥 the signals received by the observatory.

The academics had to dampen irrelevant vibrations in the signals, an exacting task that the university says is 鈥渘o easier than identifying a Morse code tapped on a wine glass at a grand party bustling with noise鈥.

The discovery is one of several major scientific breakthroughs in which Tsinghua has played a part in recent years.

鈥淲e have given high priority to cultivating innovative talents and strived to produce cutting-edge research achievements,鈥 explains Li Jinliang, the dean of Tsinghua鈥檚 Office of International Exchange and Cooperation, who adds that the institution has 鈥渆nacted a comprehensive set of reforms since 2012, which [has] enhanced the competitiveness of the university in the global setting鈥.

Scientific research is now focused on 鈥渃ross-discipline research, integration of defence and civilian technologies, cutting-edge research and the commercialisation of technological advances鈥, he says.

At the same time, Tsinghua has remained 鈥渁head of the curve in innovative education鈥, Li adds, by changing the way disciplines are categorised for undergraduate admission and 鈥渟trengthening liberal education鈥.

And the Beijing institution has 鈥減ursued deeper international cooperation in all areas to help our students gain international perspectives and better connect China to the world鈥.

Given such efforts, it is perhaps no surprise that Tsinghua University has improved on all five areas measured in the 探花视频聽Asia University Rankings 2018 鈥 teaching, research, citations, international outlook and knowledge transfer.

Thanks to its improved performance, it is now the highest-ranked university in China for the first time in the Asia rankings鈥 six-year history. It takes second place overall in Asia, swapping places with its local rival Peking University, which slips to third. The National University of Singapore holds on to first place in the regional rankings for the third year in a row.

Another first for the rankings is that Hong Kong is now the most-represented territory in the top 10 of the table, with three institutions: the University of Hong Kong and Hong Kong University of Science and Technology have each risen one place to fourth and joint fifth, respectively, while the Chinese University of Hong Kong joins this elite group for the first time after climbing four places to seventh. On average, the territory鈥檚 institutions achieved a significantly higher score for research reputation this year.

As a result, South Korea now has just two top 10 representatives, down from three last year, with Pohang University of Science and Technology falling two places to 12th. Also looking vulnerable is the position of the Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST), with the institution having slipped from eighth place to 10th this year. Overall, the country had a weaker citation impact compared with last year.

Another change this year is a further expansion of the ranking to include more than 350 universities, up from 300 last year. All universities in the top 200 are also given a distinct rank (previously those between 100th and 200th were listed in bands) to provide greater transparency of the results.

A reporter at work in Beijing, China
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Several nations have suffered declines this year. Among them is Thailand. While the country still has 10 universities in the rankings, seven of these have dropped places. All 10 universities received a lower score this year than they did last year for the research income per academic staff metric on average.

鈥淭he quality of higher education in Thailand is getting worse year by year,鈥 says Arnond Sakworawich, professor at the National Institute of Development Administration, a public graduate university in the country.

He attributes part of the blame for this decline to the selection and admission procedure, which he says 鈥渘o longer works the way it used to鈥 because of the country鈥檚 shrinking youth population.

Although Thailand鈥檚 higher education sector has about 140,000 available undergraduate places each year, the number of students applying for these is just 65,000 annually, Sakworawich explains.

Some universities are so desperate to recruit students that they are providing iPads for new recruits or giving tuition fee discounts to students who persuade a friend to enrol, he adds.

鈥淐ompetition to get into university in Thailand right now is getting close to zero. With low quality of input, how can universities produce high-quality graduates? Thai universities right now compete on marketing strategy to lure students rather than [on the] quality of education,鈥 he says.

Another issue bedevilling higher education in the country, argues Sakworawich, is the fact that Thais generally value a degree in and of itself and care much less about the pursuit of knowledge for its own sake, meaning that many graduates lack the skills needed for graduate-level jobs. This attitude also makes the study of demanding subjects such as science, technology and mathematics, as well as vocational education, unpopular in Thailand.

鈥淗ence, higher education in Thailand produces unwanted graduates and mismatches labour demand,鈥 Sakworawich says.

The picture is similarly bleak when it comes to research, and Thai universities also 鈥渦se obsolete pedagogy鈥, Sakworawich says, noting that the Office of Higher Education Commission has never succeeded in its attempts to implement a quality assurance system.

Rattana Lao is a senior consultant at the Kenan Institute Asia, which aims to address social and economic development challenges in the region, and author of A Critical Study of Thailand鈥檚 Higher Education Reforms: The Culture of Borrowing, published in 2015.

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She says that Thai higher education has become increasingly decentralised over the past 20 years, with public institutions undergoing 鈥渋ntense administrative transformation鈥 to become autonomous universities. A downside is that this has led to over-expansion as universities have been forced to find more income on their own, she says.

鈥淭here is an incentive, if not a necessity, for universities to open new programmes and short courses that promote a commercialisation purpose rather than academic excellence,鈥 Lao says.

And although the Thai government proclaims the importance of research, it has not backed this up with strong financial research commitments, she adds.

The structure of research funding itself is also a problem, according to Lao, because compulsory regular performance reviews require academics to detail their scholarly output every six months.

Instead of concentrating on a 鈥渓ong-term research agenda that will yield beneficial results鈥, the system forces academics to 鈥渦ndertake short-term research鈥 that allows them to 鈥渃hurn out papers quickly鈥, she says.

鈥淭o upgrade Thai universities, policymakers need to seriously think about long-term and structural change. So far, they focus only on coming up with the key performance indicators that [they] hope [will] change short-term behaviour,鈥 Lao says.


Browse 探花视频鈥檚 portfolio of university rankings


Taiwan is another Asian representative that is having to grapple with an ageing population and an oversupply of higher education. The territory has 31 representatives in the rankings, up from 26 last year; however, its top six institutions have all fallen down the table, and several of its lower-ranked universities have dropped as well.

Dafydd Fell, director of the Centre of Taiwan Studies at Soas, University of London, says that although Taiwanese universities are increasingly looking to mainland China to fill the student number gap, low enrolment remains 鈥渁 big problem鈥.

鈥淭here was a pretty significant expansion in the university sector in the 1990s and the initial post-2000 period. That meant there was oversupply,鈥 he says. 鈥淓ven the big national universities are struggling to run certain degrees. So some universities have already closed in the private sector, and there鈥檚 a push to merge universities.鈥

Although universities in Taiwan have some advantages over rivals in other nations of the region 鈥 its academic environment is 鈥減retty liberal鈥 in comparison with the sector in mainland China, and the quality of academics is 鈥減retty high鈥 鈥 they are very focused on research and, consequently, 鈥渘eglect teaching鈥, Fell says.

鈥淎 lot of the teaching is done in large classrooms. There are still some pretty important structural changes if they want to improve the quality of teaching,鈥 he says.

Taiwanese institutions are also not as 鈥渋nternationalised鈥 as universities in Singapore and Hong Kong, he adds.


View this year鈥檚 Asia University Rankings methodology


But less than 200km west, across the Formosa Strait, universities appear to be thriving.

Mainland China claims almost one in five places in the rankings, boasting 63 representatives overall, up from 54 last year.

Several of the country鈥檚 institutions have moved up the table this year: Nanjing University has climbed eight places to 17th, Tongji University has jumped eight places to 53rd, and Harbin Institute of Technology has leaped 15 places to 62nd, to name just a few prominent risers.

But it is not just China鈥檚 more elite universities that are registering improvements in performance; many institutions below the top 100 have upped their game as well.

Overall, China鈥檚 universities have received a large boost in their citation impact score and can boast of high levels of industry income.

In October, China released the first details of its Double First Class project (sometimes referred to as the Double World-Class project), publishing the names of 42 universities that the government will support to achieve 鈥渨orld-class鈥 status. At the same time, it announced the 95 institutions that have been chosen to develop world-class courses.

Simon Marginson, director of UCL鈥檚 Centre for Global Higher Education, says that there is 鈥渆very sign that funding for higher education and research in China will keep increasing鈥.

鈥淭he Double World-Class project is largely in continuity with the 985 Programme [which was established in 1998 to foster world-class universities], so we can assume that China sees that programme as having been successful and now wants to lift the top universities still further,鈥 he says, adding that the project is 鈥渓ikely to achieve its aims in STEM research, providing the leading Chinese universities remain strongly internationalised鈥.

Developing international powerhouses would certainly pay dividends for China, but there are concerns about the creation of a big gulf between the elite universities and the rest of the higher education sector. Of the 42 universities singled out for a push to the top tier, eight are in Beijing and six are in Shanghai, while several others are located along China鈥檚 relatively affluent east coast.


Download a copy of the Asia University Rankings 2018 digital supplement


Ye Liu, lecturer in international development at King鈥檚 College London, says that China鈥檚 model of 鈥渟ubsidising elite universities and withdrawing fiscal responsibilities鈥 for other institutions that tend to accommodate lower-income students will increase inequality in the country.

Her 2017 paper, 鈥淲hen choices become chances: extending Boudon鈥檚 positional theory to understand university choices in contemporary China鈥, highlights that the advantaged, affluent young people born in Shanghai, Beijing and Tianjin display a confidence when it comes to 鈥渆stimating their respective academic performance鈥 that is in contrast to the insecurities exhibited by their peers from provincial areas.

鈥淭he elite programme of Double First Class universities will showcase the research excellence of Chinese universities and help China to become the leader in science and technology,鈥 Liu says.

However, she adds, the global prestige associated with world-class universities will do nothing to address issues of social inequality in the country.

Other observers, meanwhile, have raised concerns about what such state intervention might mean for institutional autonomy and what impact it might have on both domestic universities and foreign institutions operating in China.

Despite these worries, many are confident that China鈥檚 strategy to create a select group of world-class universities will succeed.

鈥淎ccording to recent research and reported statistics in terms of publications in science and engineering, Chinese universities have already outperformed some established higher systems in the West,鈥 says Ka Ho Mok, vice-president and chair professor of comparative policy at Lingnan University in Hong Kong.

He adds: 鈥淕iven the strong determination to assert China鈥檚 soft power on the global stage, together with strategic funding allocated to key laboratories and main universities through the Double World-Class project, I am confident that China鈥檚 influences in the intellectual and academic community will be further enhanced.鈥澛


Seasonal changes in performance


Click on infographic to view hi-res version

As this map shows, the location of universities in the 探花视频聽Asia University Rankings 2018 is heavily skewed towards East Asia. Although there are noticeable clusters of institutions elsewhere on the continent 鈥 and Singapore stands out in the south for its overall score 鈥 it is China, South Korea, Japan, Taiwan and Hong Kong that appear to dominate the landscape.

But delving into the data demonstrates that even within this group, and elsewhere in Asia, there is a large variation in year-on-year performance.

The five 鈥渨aterfall鈥 diagrams below, which show how a country鈥檚 overall score has changed from 2017 and how each of the rankings鈥 13 metrics contributed to that, highlight how China is surging ahead thanks to a leap in citation impact score. India, too, can thank improved citation performance for a large chunk of its increase, while also picking up points in other areas such as research productivity.

Japan, on the other hand, shows a contrasting picture with continuing damage to its staff-to-student ratio 鈥 caused in large part by the country鈥檚 ageing population 鈥 undermining gains in reputation and research impact to leave it relatively static overall.

Elsewhere, Taiwan is unusual in taking a hit on citation impact but still achieving a solid improvement overall thanks to the resources being pumped into higher education. Meanwhile, in western Asia, Turkey is interesting for managing a positive outcome despite its reputation scores taking a serious knock.

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Simon Baker, data editor


Watch our video of the 2018 results

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