
Hong Kong public universities agree to return more funding if asked
In new documents signed with their funding body, the universities also agreed that the government had the right to reduce the amount of their regular allocation if they failed to meet their commitments or had any major deficiency in institutional governance.
The University Grants Committee (UGC), a government advisory body that allocates funding for higher education institutions, uploaded the university accountability agreements it signed with each institution in June.
In an unprecedented move in February, the government revealed in its budget that the eight public universities would be asked to return HK$4 billion (US$509.6 million) from their reserves that they had saved from previous government funding. Earlier, university chiefs had indicated a willingness to do so.
The budget also stated that authorities would only offer the eight public universities HK$68.1 billion in the coming three school years, falling short of the HK$70.9 billion proposed by the UGC, resulting in a 4 per cent average reduction rate.
The new clauses specified that the government would not only be allowed to claw back the money, but also exert fuller control of the funding granted to the universities.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


South China Morning Post
20 minutes ago
- South China Morning Post
Trump's order to end ‘de minimis' tariff break expands from China to rest of the world
Washington's decision to suspend the 'de minimis' tariff exemption for all countries – expanding on an earlier move that targeted Chinese shipments – is set to disrupt and ultimately reshape the global cross-border e-commerce sector, analysts said. The White House announced the order on Wednesday as part of efforts to close loopholes used to evade tariffs and smuggle 'deadly synthetic opioids as well as other unsafe or below-market products' into the United States. It will come into effect on August 29. In May, the US eliminated the exemption – which had allowed small packages worth less than US$800 to enter the country duty-free – for goods from China . The move aimed to close what many considered a regulatory loophole exploited by Chinese platforms like Temu and Shein to rapidly scale their businesses. Experts said the latest action marked a return to trade normalcy and left Chinese exporters with limited options: either compete in an already saturated domestic market, or battle fellow Chinese sellers abroad. 'Before, they could source from other countries to get around rules — that's no longer viable, as the pathways to the US market are all blocked,' said Zhuang Bo, global macro strategist at Loomis Sayles Investment Asia, an affiliate of Natixis Investment Managers.


South China Morning Post
2 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
Hong Kong crypto exchange OSL sees optimism rise as city enters stablecoin era
That assessment was made by Gary Tiu, executive director and head of regulatory affairs at OSL, at a symposium on Thursday about Hong Kong's stablecoin era. 'We will continue to build ecosystems and networks in this space,' Tiu said. 'We are the long-term partner for this space.' Stablecoins are a type of cryptocurrency token that maintain a fixed value by being pegged to a reference asset, typically fiat currencies such as the US dollar. Heightened market anticipation around stablecoins was reflected in OSL's sale of existing shares, top-up subscriptions and new shares last Friday, when it raised HK$2.36 billion (US$300 million).


South China Morning Post
2 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
China, Russia to conduct naval drill; growing interest in C919 jet: SCMP daily highlights
Catch up on some of SCMP's biggest China stories of the day. If you would like to see more of our reporting, please consider subscribing Future negotiations could take place against a more fragmented backdrop, as the superpowers vie for influence over third countries. The aircraft carrier Shandong departs from Victoria Harbor in Hong Kong, July 7. Photo: Xinhua China and Russia will hold their 'Joint Sea 2025' joint naval exercise in August, followed by the sixth joint maritime patrol in the Pacific, China's National Defence Ministry said on Wednesday. The One Big Beautiful Bill Act dramatically reverses American support for clean energy in a world racing towards decarbonisation. Meanwhile, China is projected to contribute 60 per cent of the world's expansion in renewable energy capacity by 2030, according to the International Energy Agency.