Neither my former nor current workplaces are doing badly on those links which just goes to show, you can't necessarily tell.
In terms of advice for prospective students...on the ground what I am seeing is that it's Humanities, Arts, Languages and "niche" subjects that are doing badly and in danger of being axed. So Creative Writing went entirely at my old workplace, for example, English is all but out the window there and Film, Music, Drama, Journalism, Media, PE,
Dance etc all doing badly or axed altogether. Medicine, Nursing, Allied Healthcare, Dentistry, Opthalmics, Physio etc all doing really well and in no danger. Traditional "taught"
PGCE and Education degrees are struggling to recruit. STEM and business doing well. Anything that attracts international students is doing well. Massive investment in Chinese, Indian and Arab recruitment.
In terms of the courses themselves if a DC is already enrolled and in year 1 or 2...they tend to get phased out and go down to a skeleton staff and some modules get shared with other courses. Some of this can be quite random...(ie Arts/Humanities students having to study a language or education double module whether they like it or not!). So for existing students, the courses get "taught out" and no further recruitment takes place...staff with a strong specialism and who also currently work in the field alongside lecturing (like me )get made redundant as courses become more "general" with only the very basics of the subjects taught and there are far less options for module selection or to indulge areas of interest.
Unless it's a course that leads to professional registration/guaranteed job (such as dentistry, nursing etc), I've stopped recommending university to loved ones as it feels morally wrong with the inside knowledge I have now.