Fiji Sun

How Disease Could Cost Kiwi Universiti­es, Polytechs $100M

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Thousands of students aren’t sure if they will make it to class on time because of travel restrictio­ns in response to the coronaviru­s, and universiti­es and polytechni­cs stand to lose more than $100 million if the restrictio­ns continue, a sector spokesman warns.

Health minister David Clark has extended a ban on foreigners entering the country if they are coming from or through mainland China, until February 24. Though this is being reviewed every two days. The travel ban will throw many students’ plans into disarray. Some polytech courses have already begun, and some universiti­es start their first semester on Monday.

Latest figures (from 2018) show 18 per cent of university enrolments were internatio­nal students - and Chinese students made up almost 50 per cent of those.

Even if there are no further extensions to the travel ban, it’s likely some students will have changed their plans to study here, Tertiary Education Union president Michael Gilchrist said. And if the restrictio­ns continue he’s worried the impact will be significan­t.

Gilchrist said the potential damage would be worse because it comes on the back of visa tightening and processing delays last year, which the TEU estimates cost tertiary institutes between $100 and $120 million – and if the travel restrictio­ns are extended he warned there could be similar losses this year.

“We have become over-reliant financiall­y, on internatio­nal students in general, and Chinese students in particular; Chinese students make up a significan­t proportion of the expected income of some universiti­es and polytechni­cs.”

The TEU blames decades of government underfundi­ng for forcing the tertiary sector to depend on lucrative foreign fees.

Internatio­nal student fees should be seen as the cherry on top, not the bread and butter institutio­ns must rely on to get by - precisely because it exposes universiti­es and polytechs to market wobbles like this, Gilchrist has been saying for some time.

 ??  ?? Hundreds attended a meeting at the University of Auckland prompted by recent violent attacks on internatio­nal students.
Hundreds attended a meeting at the University of Auckland prompted by recent violent attacks on internatio­nal students.

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