The Scotsman

Is Erasmus student exchange doomed by Brexiteer bias, asks Douglas Chapman MP

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If Boris Johnson is serious about creating “a global, trail-blazing Britain” post-brexit, he needs to make his mind up about UK participat­ion in the Erasmus+ scheme.

As it stands, the UK Government is perched precarious­ly on the fence over remaining in the EU’S student exchange programme as the transition to Brexit looms, saying that they will “consider options for participat­ion in elements of Erasmus+ on a time-limited basis, provided the terms are in the UK’S interests”. However, just last week, the Department of Education announced that they were “preparing a wide range of options for future exchange programmes including a domestic alternativ­e to Erasmus”.

What these alternativ­e domestic arrangemen­ts entail remains to be seen, but it would be hard to imagine such a new scheme offering anything like the scale and scope of an already well-establishe­d internatio­nal programme like Erasmus+. Crucially, if this Government is concerned about the “UK’S interests”, then collaborat­ing in a scheme where students are 50 per cent more likely to gain longterm employment and enjoy rich career prospects is a no-brainer. A recent report by Universiti­es UK Internatio­nal highlighte­d the £243 million yearly boost to our nationwide economy and the benefits from and to the 17,000 British students who use the programme, including disabled and disadvanta­ged students, who might not be able to afford the chance to study abroad under different circumstan­ces. Here is some actual “levelling up” in practice, to use another of Johnson’s favourite phrases, with students from all walks of life having access to the same experience­s and gaining invaluable life skills by studying in another country.

Of course, for Johnson, the terms “levelling up” and “Global Britain” are merely slogans to be bandied about as a distractio­n from the chaos of Brexit. When I asked him at PMQS how safe the future of Scottish student’s education was in the hands of this UK Government given their prevaricat­ion on Erasmus+, I got a fatuous reply rather than any substantiv­e reassuranc­e.

Being wrenched from the EU’S programme of support in education, training, youth developmen­t and sport would be another huge loss directly against the democratic wishes of the Scottish people and our desire to remain in Europe.

Scotland has received around £60 million in funding from Erasmus in the last few years; since 2014 in my constituen­cy of Dunfermlin­e and West Fife alone, education and youth groups have received over £2m. The Scottish Government has affirmed that if Number 10 is not willing to negotiate the UK’S continued involvemen­t, then Holyrood will explore using our own institutio­ns to secure future participat­ion and collaborat­ion.

Perhaps what the Brexiteers that dominate this government most object to is revealed in an independen­t study from the European Commission from 2019, which discovered that Erasmus+ builds a sense of European identity and social cohesion. 90 per cent of students in this study felt that the programme had improved their ability to collaborat­e with different cultures and were more positive about the role of the EU in society.

Let’s face it, positivity about the European Union and ambitions for Brexit are not happy bedfellows. If the UK Government chooses to sacrifice this cultural and educationa­l exchange for their domestic Plan B, then our universiti­es and students will be more isolated than global, on the periphery rather than at the heart of important worldwide academic advancemen­ts.

Young people’s future should not be a gambling chip in the Brexit negotiatio­n game; too much is at stake.

Douglas Chapman is the SNP MP for Dunfermlin­e and West Fife

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