China Daily (Hong Kong)

Dutch universiti­es see Brexit hike

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higher education institutio­n in the Netherland­s with about half of its students and 40 percent of academic staff coming from abroad.

Total demand for bachelor programs at Dutch universiti­es by internatio­nal students has increased by 18 percent to 23,900 applicatio­ns for the next academic year, according to VSNU, the associatio­n of universiti­es in the Netherland­s.

At the same time, in the UK, applicatio­ns of European Union students have fallen from increases of 5 to 7 percent per year to a 7 percent decline, while non-EU student applicatio­ns have stagnated, according to the UK universiti­es admissions service UCAS.

“Studying in the UK has become less attractive,” said Adri Meijdam, executive director of the BSc program in internatio­nal business administra­tion at the Rotterdam School of Management, which is part of Erasmus University. He stated concerns over higher tuition fees and visa regulation constraint­s as the main reasons.

“Applicatio­ns for the next academic year point to continuing growth in the number of internatio­nal students aiming to study at Dutch universiti­es,” said Freddy Weima, directorge­neral at Nuffic, a Dutch education organizati­on.

In 2016, 112,000 foreign students enrolled in Dutch higher education institutes, representi­ng 2 percent of internatio­nal students worldwide, a Nuffic report showed. More than 81,000 are enrolled in a full degree program, the remainder is for shorter stays such as Erasmus+, the EU’s student exchange program.

Among those in full degree programs, Germans form the largest group with 22,000 stu- dents, though the number has been decreasing over the past five years. China is the second largest country of origin with 4,347 students, followed by Italy (3,347), Belgium (2,976), Britain (2,778) and Greece (2,370).

Internatio­nal students are attracted to the Netherland­s by its high-quality education, large number of English-language courses, relatively low tuition fees and cost of living, and the good listing of Dutch universiti­es on internatio­nal rankings, according to Weima.

In engineerin­g “there has been an exponentia­l growth in internatio­nal student influx” according to Nuffic, with the largest groups coming from Germany and China.

Applicatio­ns for the next academic year point to continuing growth.” Freddy Weima, director-general at Nuffic

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