


Britain’s bankrupt universities are hunting for cheaper models
They have failed to focus on efficiency for the mass market
As the academic year in Britain limps to a close, universities look more broke than a student after a summer of Interrailing. The Office for Students, a regulator, reckons that four in ten universities are running deficits. Half have closed courses to save money, according to a poll of 60 institutions by Universities UK (UUK), an industry group. Durham has shed 200 staff; Newcastle a similar number. Unions allege that a cost-saving plan announced by Lancaster could see close to one in five of its academics lose their job.
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This article appeared in the Britain section of the print edition under the headline “Leaner learning”

How to solve the backlog in England’s courts
Start with a proper look at what caused the problem

Britain and Germany sign a historic treaty
The two countries hope it will alleviate a set of mutual ailments

Operation Rubific, the portrait of failure
A rotten episode over Afghan refugees implicates much of the British state
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Patrick Lane, our senior digital editor, on the finance minister’s speech at Mansion House
Britain has a rare opportunity to lure American talent
Pricey visas might scupper its chances
British bats are a conservation success story
They have few friends, but powerful lawyers