
Italy defies European decline in QS rankings as Politecnico di Milano breaks into global top 100
While most large EU university systems lose ground, Italy emerges as the sole exception with 26 risers, as India and Brazil struggle to convert individual excellence into broader momentum.
The latest QS World University Rankings for 2027 paint a picture of a European higher education landscape in retreat — with one striking exception. Across the continent, the dominant narrative is of slippage: major systems in France, Germany and Spain have seen more institutions fall than rise. Yet Italy has bucked the trend decisively. Of its 47 ranked universities, 26 improved their standing while only 15 declined, making it the only large European Union system with a positive balance. The headline act is the Politecnico di Milano, which surged 11 places to 87th globally, the highest position ever achieved by an Italian university and its twelfth consecutive year as the country’s top-ranked institution. Viewed from Brussels, the Italian performance raises questions about what policy or investment choices are insulating its sector from the headwinds buffeting neighbours.
In New Delhi, the mood is one of qualified optimism. The Indian Institute of Technology Delhi climbed five spots to 118th, retaining its status as India’s highest-ranked university for the second year running. Officials at the Ministry of Education hailed the result as evidence of growing global recognition for Indian teaching and research. Yet the broader picture remains sobering: only three Indian institutions — IIT Delhi, IIT Bombay and IIT Madras — feature in the top 200. For a country of India’s demographic weight and geopolitical ambition, the thin presence at the summit of global academia underscores a persistent gap between elite excellence and systemic depth. The rankings suggest that while flagship technical institutes are gaining traction, the wider university ecosystem has yet to follow.
From São Paulo, the view is considerably bleaker. Brazil recorded one of the steepest decline rates among systems with at least ten ranked universities, with 14 of its 22 classified institutions falling. The University of São Paulo, long the nation’s standard-bearer, dropped 25 places to 133rd, continuing a slide from its peak of 85th in 2024. No Brazilian university appears in the top 100. Analysts in Latin America point to chronic underfunding, political turbulence and brain drain as factors eroding the country’s competitiveness, even as individual researchers and departments maintain world-class output. The data reinforce a sense that without structural reform, even the region’s strongest institutions will struggle to hold their ground.
At the very apex, the hierarchy remains familiar: the Massachusetts Institute of Technology retains first place, followed by Imperial College London and Stanford, with Oxford, Harvard, Cambridge and Zurich rounding out the old guard. But the realignment beneath them is unmistakable. Asian universities — notably the National University of Singapore, the University of Hong Kong and Peking University — continue their ascent, embedding themselves ever more firmly among the global elite. This shift, long predicted by analysts in London and Washington, is now an established feature of the rankings landscape, reflecting Asia’s sustained investment in research infrastructure and international faculty recruitment.
Looking ahead, the 2027 rankings offer a study in divergence. Italy’s success demonstrates that national policy can still produce broad-based improvement even as neighbouring systems falter. India’s challenge is to translate the excellence of its top technical institutes into a wider network of globally competitive universities. For Brazil and much of Latin America, the priority is stabilisation before any talk of ascent. The global knowledge economy is becoming more multipolar, but the pace of change is uneven — and the penalties for standing still are growing steeper.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
2 editorial groups · 3 languages
Italian universities climb the QS ranking, bucking the decline seen across the rest of the EU. With 26 institutions improving and only 15 falling, Italy is the only major European system with more gainers than losers. Politecnico di Milano breaks into the global top 100.
Brazilian universities keep sliding in the QS ranking, with none in the top 100. The country posted the seventh-highest decline rate among systems with at least 10 ranked institutions: 14 fell, only 8 held steady. USP remains the best-placed but still outside the elite group.
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