The Los Angeles Post
U.S. World Business Lifestyle
Today: March 26, 2025
Today: March 26, 2025

UK universities at risk as international student numbers plunge, report says

FILE PHOTO: Students and visitors are seen walking around the main campus buildings of University College London (UCL) in London, Britain
May 29, 2024
Andrew MacAskill - Reuters

By Andrew MacAskill

LONDON (Reuters) - Britain should avoid further restricting international student numbers or some universities may collapse, a government commissioned report said on Tuesday, after foreign registrations plummeted for next year.

High levels of legal migration have long dominated Britain's political discourse and were one of the major drivers for the Brexit referendum in 2016.

UK universities at risk as international student numbers plunge, report says
FILE PHOTO: Students and visitors are seen walking around the main campus buildings of University College London (UCL) in London, Britain

Along with care staff and low salaried workers, the government of Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has sought to reduce the number of students coming to Britain, including preventing some post-graduate students from bringing family members.

The Migration Advisory Committee, an independent body which gives the government advice, said the number of international postgraduate students paying deposits to study at British universities this September had dropped by 63%, compared with the previous year, after the government put restrictions on education visas.

The report warned that further restrictions on the so-called graduate route, which allows foreign students to work in Britain for up to two years after graduation, would lead to job losses, course closures and a risk "that some institutions would fail".

Britain boasts some of the most famous and sought after universities in the world, from Oxford and Cambridge to Imperial College London. Business leaders argue that they boost innovation, increase creativity and provide a form of soft power, as many world leaders have studied at British colleges.

The government commissioned the review after concerns that the graduate visa route was being abused. Some British politicians have complained that some students are applying for visas and then claim asylum or overstay.

Esther McVey, a minister in Sunak's cabinet, said on Monday that some British universities were "selling immigration to international students rather than education".

A spokesman for Sunak said the government would consider the report and respond. But the spokesman highlighted concerns about the scheme, pointing out that more than 40% of international students using the route were either not working or earning below 15,000 pounds ($18,834) a year after graduation.

The Migration Advisory Committee found there was no evidence of widespread abuse specifically for the graduate route. Students from four countries โ€“ India, Nigeria, China and Pakistan โ€“ account for 70% of graduate visas.

British business lobby group, the CBI, said British universities were one of the country's biggest export successes, and with the Migration Advisory Committee saying the system was not being abused "it's time to put its future beyond doubt and end this period of damaging speculation."

($1 = 0.7964 pounds)

(Additional reporting by Sachin Ravikumar; Editing by Kate Holton and William Maclean)

Related Articles

Germany's Merkel recalls Putin's 'power games' and contrasting US presidents in her memoirs UK inflation worries tick up after big-spending budget and Trump win UK Treasury chief says she's not satisfied by paltry third-quarter economic growth UK must keep trade open and EU close in fragmenting world, Bank of England's Bailey says
Share This

Popular

Business|Education|Political|Technology|US

Supreme Court takes up $8 billion phone and internet subsidy for rural and low-income areas

Supreme Court takes up $8 billion phone and internet subsidy for rural and low-income areas
Education|Environment|Health|Political|Science|US

Researchers in limbo as Columbia bows to Trumpโ€™s demands in bid to restore $400M federal funding cut

Researchers in limbo as Columbia bows to Trumpโ€™s demands in bid to restore $400M federal funding cut
Education|MidEast|Political|US

Visa of Cornell University student fighting deportation is revoked by the State Department

Visa of Cornell University student fighting deportation is revoked by the State Department
Education|Political|Sports|US

Portland schools face civil rights probe over transgender athlete

Portland schools face civil rights probe over transgender athlete

Education

Education|Political|US

Iowa law banning school library books that depict sex acts on hold again after a new federal ruling

Iowa law banning school library books that depict sex acts on hold again after a new federal ruling
Crime|Education|MidEast|Political|US

Federal judge issues temporary restraining order stopping federal agents from detaining Columbia University student

Federal judge issues temporary restraining order stopping federal agents from detaining Columbia University student
Education|MidEast|Political|US

Columbia student protester can't be detained for now as she fights deportation, judge rules

Columbia student protester can't be detained for now as she fights deportation, judge rules
Education|Political|US

GOP-led states push for control of school aid as Trump promises a smaller federal role in education

GOP-led states push for control of school aid as Trump promises a smaller federal role in education