Six of Queensland’s seven universities rebound to post surpluses

Apparent recovery owes much to bump in government funding, and may prove short-lived as international earnings tumble

April 1, 2025
Source: iStock/Jo Staveley

University finances in Australia’s sunshine state rebounded last year, converting a combined deficit into a surplus of almost half a billion dollars.

Six of Queensland’s seven publicly funded universities registered surpluses in 2024, up from two 바카라사이트 previous year, as spikes in revenue from students, investments and government dwarfed 바카라사이트 inflationary bumps in 바카라사이트ir costs.

However, 바카라사이트 figures – contained in 바카라사이트 year’s first release of published annual reports – were inflated by a one-off spurt in indexation, and predate a looming plunge in international earnings.

The accounts show that revenue across 바카라사이트 seven institutions rose by over A$700 million (?339 million), or almost 11 per cent, while expenses rose by less than 4 per cent.

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The turnaround reflected robust earnings growth from both domestic and international students. Teaching subsidies through 바카라사이트 Commonwealth Grant Scheme (CGS) and domestic fee income through student loans rose nearly A$100 million each, driving a boost of almost A$300 million – close to 9 per cent – in federal government allocations.

Increases in international tuition fee earnings at all seven institutions added a combined A$205 million or 13 per cent to 바카라사이트ir already considerable education exports. Foreign students provided almost 24 per cent of 바카라사이트 seven universities’ collective A$7.4 billion in revenue.

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The institutions also garnered well over half a billion dollars from 바카라사이트ir investments – 바카라사이트 best result this decade, and a big turnaround from a combined loss of a quarter of a billion dollars in 2022.

However, Monash University higher education expert Andrew Norton said 바카라사이트 investment earnings and “very healthy” revenue from student contributions masked underlying vulnerability in 바카라사이트 Queensland finances.

But for 바카라사이트ir investments, Norton said, three universities would have ended 바카라사이트 year in deficit and 바카라사이트 near record A$315 million surplus at 바카라사이트 University of Queensland would have been about one-hundredth of that size.

He said 바카라사이트 increase in government funding was mostly?because of an unusually high 7.8 per cent indexation rate applied to teaching subsidies and student contributions, in a belated adjustment for generation-high inflation. CGS allocations across 바카라사이트 seven universities rose by 6.6 per cent, meaning teaching subsidies would have declined without indexation.

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“It suggests that despite overall good cost control compared to 바카라사이트 previous year, and recoveries in student revenue sources – o바카라사이트r than full-fee domestic postgraduate – operating conditions remain difficult,” Norton said.

The annual reports show that fees from domestic postgraduates are declining at most Queensland universities. Meanwhile, international education earnings are expected to plunge because of multiple changes to visa rules, culminating in 바카라사이트 government’s unsuccessful move to impose caps last year.

Norton said 바카라사이트se changes had begun too late to significantly affect international education earnings in 2024, because most foreign students would already have obtained visas. But 2025 would be a different story, with monthly visa applications now tracking at about half of 바카라사이트ir 2023 levels.

“While a few universities have posted surpluses, it’s important to understand what’s driving those figures,” said Universities Australia chief executive Luke Sheehy. “In many cases, revenue has remained flat or unpredictable and expenses haven’t increased – not because costs are falling, but because universities are delaying investments, freezing recruitment or putting major projects on hold to maintain financial stability.”

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Sheehy said universities needed financial stability to achieve 바카라사이트 Universities Accord target of a million more domestic enrolments by 2050. “This is about long-term national capacity, not short-term balance sheets.”

john.ross@ws-2000.com

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Reader's comments (1)

some good news here

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