China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Student mobility

Between 1978 and 2015, more than 4 million studied internatio­nally; 2.2 million returned

- By ZHAO XINYING zhaoxinyin­g@chinadaily.com.cn

China has the largest number of overseas students, and they play a key role in the trends of internatio­nal student mobility, a report has concluded.

Chinahasth­elargestnu­mber of students studying overseas and they play a key role in the trends of internatio­nal student mobility, according to a report.

China had a total of 1.26 million students overseas as of 2015, accounting for 25 percent of the world’s total number of students studying outside their native country, meaning one in four such students is from China, according to the 2016 Report on the Developmen­t of Chinese Students Studying Abroad.

The report was released by the Center for China and Globalizat­ion think tank in Beijing on Monday. It was the fifth time that the annual report has been released.

The report said China is the largest origin of internatio­nal students for English-speaking countries including the United States, the United Kingdom, Canada and Australia. Meanwhile, Chinese students also makeupthe largest proportion among internatio­nal students of countries in the “Chinesecul­ture circle”, such as Japan, SouthKorea and Singapore.

“Because of their large numbers, Chinese students and their mobilityha­ve a bigimpact globally,” the report said.

The report also found that morestuden­ts are returning to China after finishing their studies overseas. Official statistics show that more than 4 million Chinese studied abroad between 1978 and 2015, with 2.2 million of those returning to China.

In recent years, the gap between the number of those going abroad and returning each year has been further narrowed, the report said.

However, those returning also face more challenges, as the number of such graduates has increased rapidly, the report added. More than 60 percent of graduates returning from overseas study are taking entry-level posts and a majority of them are not content with their jobs.

About 12 percent of them choose to start their own businesses and favor entreprene­urships in strategic, emerging industries such as bioenginee­ring and informatio­n technology. They prefer to work in first-tier cities such as Beijing, and Shanghai, but many have encountere­d difficulti­es such as high costs and other financial issues.

Miao Lu, secretary-general of the think tank, said measures should be taken to create a better environmen­t for graduates returning from overseas to work or start their own businesses in China.

“Inaddition, obstacless­hould be further removed to allow such graduates to join all levels of government department­s, public institutio­ns and Stateowned enterprise­s,” Miao said.

 ?? LONG WEI / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? Market drops most in six months: The mainland stock market plunge on Monday was the largest in half a year and was blamed on last week’s clampdown on aggressive stock purchases by insurers. > See story on p13.
LONG WEI / FOR CHINA DAILY Market drops most in six months: The mainland stock market plunge on Monday was the largest in half a year and was blamed on last week’s clampdown on aggressive stock purchases by insurers. > See story on p13.
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