Global Times

Australian education losing attraction for Chinese students

- By Yang Kunyi and Li Xuanmin

Fewer Chinese students are going to study in Australia due to a sluggish economy there and souring relations between the two countries.

“Applicants to Australian universiti­es via our platform have dropped by about 5 percent so far this year,” Wang Lunwen, CEO of study abroad agency Sky Migration, told the Global Times on Wednesday.

By contrast, the number of applicatio­ns to UK and other European universiti­es jumped, and the US also remained one of the favorite education destinatio­ns for Chinese students. According to a report, the UK authority granted over 99,000 student visa in 2018, increasing 13 percent year-on-year.

The reasons behind the decline are tensions between China and Australia as well as slowing economic growth in Australia, according to industry insiders and experts.

“The strained political relations between the two countries are making students, as well as parents, worry about the general environmen­t for Chinese students,” said Liu Qing, director of the department for AsiaPacifi­c security and cooperatio­n at the China Institute of Internatio­nal Studies.

“Slow economic growth is also looming over graduates’ prospects of landing a job in Australia,” Liu said.

Some Chinese companies have withdrawn or held back investment in Australia due to strained bilateral relations, which weighs on the job prospects of Chinese students, according to Wang. “If it’s hard to stay and find a job there, fewer Chinese students would come.”

In 2018, foreign direct investment from China to Australia totaled $2.9 billion, dropping more than 30 percent year-on-year, data from China’s Ministry of Commerce showed.

Meanwhile, Chinese students are also worried about whether political tensions would translate to hurdles in visa applicatio­ns and career prospects, which prompted them to give up their study plans, Wang said.

China is the biggest source of internatio­nal students, accounting for 30 percent of Australia’s all-important internatio­nal education sector in 2018.

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