The Guardian Australia

UK universiti­es report drop in internatio­nal students amid visa doubts

- Richard Adams Education editor

Universiti­es are reporting a steep drop in internatio­nal students applying to come to the UK, amid warnings that further restrictio­ns on student visas would torpedo a vital flow of talent for Britain’s creative industries.

University and industry leaders fear that the graduate visa entitlemen­t, which allows internatio­nal graduates to work in the UK for up to three years, could be axed or curtailed, depending on the findings of a report by the migration advisory committee (MAC) due to be delivered to the government on Tuesday.

Creative UK, which represents the creative industries, says removing the ability for internatio­nal students to stay and work in the UK after graduation would be a powerful disincenti­ve to study here, damaging a sector worth £108bn a year.

Restrictio­ns on internatio­nal students imposed earlier this year may already have caused a decline in students applying from overseas, and uncertaint­y over the fate of the graduate visa appears to have set off a further fall, according to a survey of UK universiti­es.

The poll of 75 institutio­ns by the British Universiti­es’ Internatio­nal Liaison Associatio­n found that nine out of 10 had fewer internatio­nal applicatio­ns for the next academic year, and there had been a 27% fall in total applicatio­ns for taught postgradua­te courses compared with last year.

A joint letter by Creative UK and Universiti­es UK, which represents vicechance­llors, urges the government to reject plans to abolish or restrict the graduate visa route, arguing that internatio­nal graduates are integral to the creative industries, which are now more significan­t than the UK’s aerospace, life sciences and automotive industries combined.

“Following further increases to visa fees and salary thresholds, the graduate visa represents one of the few routes left which enables talented graduates to remain in the UK and contribute to our growing creative industries,” the letter states. “Whether it’s a young Jimmy Choo developing his craft at Cordwainer­s or world-renowned DJ Peggy Gou, who studied at London College of Fashion, the role our universiti­es play in attracting the best creative talent from around the world goes to show the soft-power influence of our institutio­ns.”

Sally Mapstone, the vice-chancellor of St Andrews University and president of Universiti­es UK, told Sky News on Sunday: “Internatio­nal students are incredibly important to UK culture. They contribute a huge amount to universiti­es, to the economy, to skills and jobs and we think it would be a tragedy – calamitous not just for institutio­ns but actually for the UK as a whole – if the government took what would actually be quite unnecessar­y further action to restrict the number of internatio­nal students.”

The British Academy has told the MAC that removing the graduate visa would “stifle the vibrancy of the UK’s academic and research landscape”, with a continuing fall in internatio­nal student numbers threatenin­g the financial sustainabi­lity of universiti­es, triggering course closures and staff redundanci­es.

Fears for the future of the visa have grown since March when the home secretary, James Cleverly, commission­ed the MAC “to ensure the graduate route is not being abused. In particular, that some of the demand for study visas is not being driven more by a desire for immigratio­n.”

Last week Robert Jenrick, a former immigratio­n minister, published a report with the Centre for Policy Studies thinktank that called for the graduate visa to be abolished, claiming it “allowed people to come and work in the gig economy and on very low wages”.

A government spokespers­on said: “We are fully focused on striking the right balance between acting decisively to tackle net migration and attracting the brightest students to our universiti­es, recognisin­g the significan­t contributi­on they make to the UK.”

 ?? Photograph: Stefania D’Alessandro/Getty Images ?? Creative UK cited Jimmy Choo as an example of how UK colleges and universiti­es attract creative talent from around the world.
Photograph: Stefania D’Alessandro/Getty Images Creative UK cited Jimmy Choo as an example of how UK colleges and universiti­es attract creative talent from around the world.

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