Daily Mail

Non-EU students hit record high as univeritie­s seek out higher fees

- By Connor Stringer

A RECORD number of non-EU internatio­nal students have applied to study in the UK amid concern they are favoured by universiti­es for paying higher fees.

Applicatio­ns from non-EU countries have increased by 1.5 per cent to 95,840 in the past year, Ucas figures show.

This has been driven by a rise in applicant numbers from China and Turkey, which increased by 3.3 per cent and 37 per cent respective­ly compared with last January.

Some UK students could be pushed out of universiti­es in favour of more lucrative internatio­nal students who pay much higher fees, experts say.

With tuition fees frozen during a period of high inflation, universiti­es are increasing­ly looking to foreign students as a way of sustaining funding. Fees have been capped at £9,250 for domestic students but there is no limit for internatio­nal students.

nick hillman, of the higher Education Policy Institute, a think-tank, said: ‘UK universiti­es vehemently deny that internatio­nal students are displacing home students and it is certainly more complicate­d than a straight one-for-one swap.

‘It is possible that the result of this year’s applicatio­n round could be fewer UK undergradu­ates and more internatio­nal ones than last year. Universiti­es lose increasing­ly large sums on each home student and have an ever bigger shortfall to make up via internatio­nal student fees.’

By the January deadline this year, 115,730 overseas students had applied for undergradu­ate places – up 0.7 per cent on the last year, according to figures from the university admissions service Ucas.

Vanessa Wilson, chief executive of University Alliance, said: ‘The benefits are mutual: Internatio­nal students drive more than £40billion in education export income every year, approximat­ely £560 per citizen. They also contribute additional subsidies to access the nhS and support the financial sustainabi­lity of our universiti­es, enabling them to open up more opportunit­ies for home students without increasing the contributi­on of taxpayers or UK students.’

Meanwhile, the Department for Education has pledged to investigat­e allegation­s of bad practice by agents who recruit internatio­nal students to study in the UK.

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