The University of Oxford tops the 2020 edition of the rankings for the fourth consecutive year, but most of the country’s other leading institutions have fallen.
The University of Cambridge, Imperial College London, UCL, the London School of Economics and Political Science, and the University of Edinburgh – the UK’s next highest-ranked universities – have all dropped by one place. Overall, 18 of the 28 UK institutions ranked in the top 200 of the table have declined since last year.
Japan also extends its lead over the UK in terms of overall representation from five to 10, after overtaking the UK as the second most-represented country in the world last year. The UK now has 100 ranked universities in total, while Japan has 110.
2019 rank
1
5
2
3
4
7
6
8
10
9
2020 rank
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
University
Country
United Kingdom
United States
United Kingdom
United States
United States
United States
United States
United States
United States
United Kingdom
While many UK institutions’ falls since last year is small, a THE analysis of five years of data reveals a consistent downward trend. In 2016, 34 UK universities featured in the top 200 (compared with 28 this year), of which 26 have since declined – largely due to universities in other countries improving at a faster rate.
In contrast, Germany managed to boost its numbers in the top 200 in the same period by three to 23, China by five to seven and Australia by three to 11.
The longitudinal study also shows that UK universities’ funding levels have been outpaced by other major higher education systems. The average amount of institutional income per academic at the 48 UK universities in the top 400 is $497,000 (£404,000), an increase of just 6.5 per cent since 2016.
The equivalent figure in Germany is $1.21 million, a rise of 38 per cent during the same period, while in China it is $1.47 million, an increase of 57.1 per cent. Even US public universities in the top 400 have fared better, with their average income rising 12.5 per cent to $995,000 – although the funding levels of state institutions in the top 200 dropped by 5 per cent.
Stephen Conway, director of research services at the University of Oxford, said that one of the major challenges facing his institution and other UK universities was “ensuring we have access to the resources and funding to continue to compete with our global peers”.
“The contribution that UK public funders make to the real costs of research in universities has declined at a time when other parts of the world are investing in their research and innovation systems,” he said.
Simon Marginson, director of Oxford’s Centre for Global Higher Education, said that UK universities had long benefited from having a strong academic culture and an entrepreneurial spirit, while “Britain’s global legacy and the confidence this brings when operating offshore” has also provided advantages.
However, he said that these conditions “cannot hold up the UK position forever in the face of the countervailing factors” of modest national investment on research and development; strong policy pushback against “global connections, which is affecting both practical global engagement and international reputation”; the weakened financial sustainability of universities as a result of the pensions dispute; and the loss of European structural funds and falling European research funding.
- by Ellie Bothwell – from Times Higher Education