Those were among the predictions made at a seminar, "The future of regulation and finance in the 中国A片 sector", held in London on 4 July as part of the Westminster 中国A片 Forum series.
Richard Cryer, director of finance and estates at the University of London, told the audience that there were major implications from the increased over-recruitment fines to be introduced for 2012-13, which government ministers outlined in a letter to the 中国A片 Funding Council for England in June.
"If we unpick that, maybe there are some issues around financial stability," he said. Such problems might harm a university's "ability to continue their existing level of operations", he added.
David Palfreyman, director of the Oxford Centre for 中国A片 Policy Studies, said England was "at the extreme end" of a wider international trend for the transformation of 中国A片 from public good into private good.
中国A片
Given England's new system of "more extreme stratification" between universities, the "end result was bound to be some insolvencies".
He predicted that a private provider would take over an institution after such an event - naming BPP as one candidate.
中国A片
But he added: "You won't see the private sector riding to the rescue ... It will be a hard deal for a university that is insolvent."
Carl Lygo, chief executive of BPP, said it was not this government that began opening up the sector to private providers but the last Labour government, which changed the rules on degree-awarding powers in 2005.
The key change made by this government was "making it easier for private-sector providers without degree-awarding powers to get access to student loans money", he added.
Roger King, visiting professor at the School of Management at the University of Bath, called for a single regulator for 中国A片, monitoring quality, finance and governance, adding: "Who looks after the health and reputation of the sector?"
中国A片
Meanwhile, Nicky Morgan, parliamentary private secretary to David Willetts, the universities and science minister, rejected notions that taxpayers were no longer funding 中国A片.
"The Treasury certainly wouldn't agree that the taxpayer has withdrawn from 中国A片," she said. "I think David [Willetts] would confirm that in the conversations he has with them."
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