UWI Five Islands Campus posts Nearly 4 Million surplus

The University of the West Indies Five Islands Campus has reported a surplus of EC$3.7 million for its last academic year, even as a multi-million-dollar investment in new digital systems temporarily affected key financial indicators.
Speaking at the campus’s annual meeting, Principal Justin Robinson said the institution maintained strong fiscal discipline, recording an operating margin of 13.2%.
However, he noted that both the expenses-to-income ratio and operating margin shifted unfavourably due to a one-off EC$4.2 million investment in the Ellucian Banner Enterprise Resource Planning system.
The bulk of that cost—around EC$4 million—was linked to subscription, software and licensing fees, which accounting rules required to be fully expensed within a single financial year.
Adjusted for that expenditure, Robinson said the campus would have recorded a significantly higher surplus of EC$7.9 million, with margins in line with previous performance.
He described the investment as a strategic move toward “digital autonomy”, aimed at replacing manual and fragmented systems with a fully integrated platform. The system, implemented between late 2024 and mid-2025, now supports student registration, finance, accounts and data analytics.
Campus Registrar Camille Samuel said the platform has already improved oversight, allowing near-instant tracking of student performance and earlier intervention when students disengage.
The financial update comes as the campus expands both its regional role and academic offerings. Robinson announced that Jamaica, Grenada, St Kitts and Nevis, and St Vincent and the Grenadines have agreed to provide financial support to the institution, ending Antigua and Barbuda’s position as its sole government backer.
He described the move, agreed at recent Technical Advisory Committee meetings, as a turning point for the campus, which has been positioning itself as a hub for the Organisation of Eastern Caribbean States. Robinson also urged other OECS countries to join the funding arrangement.
Alongside broader government backing, the university is pursuing longer-term financial stability through a newly approved endowment fund targeting US$50 million over the next decade. The fund is expected to support scholarships, research, infrastructure and emergency resilience.
The campus is also expanding its academic portfolio, with a new Bachelor of Science in Software Engineering set to launch in August in partnership with the Global Institute of Software Technology in Suzhou, China. The programme will see students split their studies between Antigua and China, graduating with degrees from both institutions and gaining paid internship experience abroad.
Additional programmes in financial technology, cybersecurity and artificial intelligence are also in development, as part of what Robinson described as a strategy to align teaching with the demands of a modern, technology-driven economy.
He said the pace of expansion reflects the campus’s intention to remain agile and responsive, adding that its status as a relatively new institution allows it to adapt more quickly than older universities.
The Five Islands campus also continues to develop specialised programmes, including the University’s only master’s degree focused on managing chronic non-communicable diseases—an area Robinson said reflects urgent regional health challenges.
With enrolment expected to grow by around 16%, the campus says its financial performance and programme expansion form part of a broader push to strengthen its role as a regional research and education centre.
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