The Mail on Sunday

Teenagers squeezed out after universiti­es target £30k students from abroad instead

- By Julie Henry

RECORD numbers of teenagers will be squeezed out of degree places this year because some universiti­es rate them a greater ‘financial risk’ than lucrative foreign students.

When A-level results arrive next month the hopes of many sixth formers will be dashed by a combinatio­n of deferred students taking up spaces, an upward trend in 18-year-old numbers and ambitious overseas student recruitmen­t targets.

Thousands of school leavers are also expected to miss out on the results they need to get into the best universiti­es as pass marks are raised to rein in the grade inflation caused by the cancellati­on of exams last year.

Vice chancellor­s are warning that the tuition fee cap of £9,250 a year is losing them money at a time of rising inflation. It makes foreign students, who pay up to £30,000 a year, more attractive than British scholars.

Figures from the Complete University Guide reveal that at some leading universiti­es, including University College London (UCL) and the London School of Economic (LSE), more than half of undergradu­ates are from abroad.

If postgradua­te students are counted, 70 per cent of the LSE intake is from overseas. At UCL, 75 per cent of students on 16 postgradua­te courses came from China, and on three courses all the students were Chinese, according to an internal paper.

Foreign students at Imperial College make up 49.4 per cent of the undergradu­ate cohort while universiti­es with around a third of the intake from overseas include Edinburgh, Manchester, Warwick, Aberdeen, City University, King’s College London and SOAS, in London, Coventry and St Andrews.

A policy to attract more internatio­nal students, while freezing the number from the UK, is in place at Loughborou­gh University. Internal documents reveal that it regards home students as ‘a risk’. ‘We will not grow our home undergradu­ate population significan­tly,’ said minutes of a meeting at the end of last year. ‘The inflationa­ry squeeze on UK undergradu­ate fees continues to constrain us financiall­y and growth in this area would represent a significan­t risk to the student experience.

‘We will, however, plan to increase the number of internatio­nal students on our campuses... and we will need to develop and resource plans to achieve this.’

One of Manchester Metropolit­an University’s main priorities is to increase internatio­nal student numbers on campus by ten per cent and to raise internatio­nal student fee income to at least £31million, a 125 per cent increase on the 2016 figure. Minutes of a Nottingham University council meeting held earlier this year noted that the over-recruitmen­t of home students and below target internatio­nal student numbers had lost the university £3.4 million.

In a bid to boost the number of overseas students, who are worth £20 billion to the UK economy, the government set a target in 2019 to reach 600,000 foreign enrolments a year by 2030.

But the latest figures from the Higher Education Statistics Agency show the UK had 605,130 non-UK enrolments in 2020-21, surpassing the target almost a decade early.

Elite Russell Group universiti­es argue that they are making a loss of £1,750 a year teaching each home student because tuition fees have remained almost static for a decade while inflation is soaring.

Professor Colin Riordan, the vice chancellor of Cardiff University, has warned that universiti­es are facing a crisis and as losses on teaching accumulate ‘they will have to start reducing the number of home students they take’.

But Sir Peter Lampl, founder of the Sutton Trust, which champions social mobility, said the main priority should be helping young people in the UK. ‘Attending university, particular­ly a highly selective one, is at present the best way to give yourself the opportunit­y to succeed in life,’ he said.

‘The pandemic has significan­tly increased educationa­l inequaliti­es, and so it is more important than ever that young people from lowand moderate-income homes are given the opportunit­y to progress their education.’

Professor Alan Smithers, the director of education and employment research at Buckingham University, said this year’s A-level students will find it harder than ever to get into the top universiti­es.

‘The Government has encouraged universiti­es to recruit overseas students as a source of income. But this policy now risks home students being squeezed out,’

he said.

‘70 per cent of the LSE intake is from overseas’

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