Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

UK VISA MOVE TO BENEFIT MANY INDIAN STUDENTS

- Prasun Sonwalkar prasun.sonwalkar@hindustant­imes.com ■

LONDON: The UK on Wednesday announced the return of the twoyear post-study work visa that was popular with self-financing Indian students, reversing a 2012 decision which led to a sharp drop in students coming to the UK. Indian and other internatio­nal students at UK educationa­l institutes who complete an undergradu­ate or PG degree in any subject in 2021 will be able to stay for two years and take up a job or look for work, with no restrictio­ns on the type or level of employment.

LONDON/NEW DELHI: The UK on Wednesday announced the return of the two-year post-study work visa that was popular with self-financing Indian students, reversing a 2012 decision which led to a sharp drop in Indian students coming to Britain.

Indian and other internatio­nal students at approved UK educationa­l institutes who complete an undergradu­ate or postgradua­te degree in any subject in 2021 will be able to stay for two years and take up a job or look for work, with no restrictio­ns on the type or level of employment.

Those who get jobs in the twoyear period will be able to switch to skilled work, which is a route to settlement in the UK.

“This is great news for Indian students who are likely to benefit disproport­ionately from this,” Britain’s deputy high commission­er Jan Thompson said in New Delhi. She said there had been a 42% increase in visas issued to Indian students last year, while the overall number of student visas had doubled in the past three years.

The UK, Thompson said, hopes to attract 600,000 internatio­nal students by 2030 and sees “India playing a strong part in that”. Britain is creating an immigratio­n system that is open to the “best and brightest”, she said.

This visa route was scrapped by Theresa May when she was home secretary in April 2012 on the ground it was too generous, along with other measures such as closing bogus colleges.

Before its closure, Indian students with loans used the twoyear period to find work and recover the expenses of studying in the UK. Scrapping the visa led to a perception the UK was less welcoming, prompting a fall in Indian students from the high of 39,090 in 2010-2011 to 16,550 in 2016-17. Tom Birtwistle, head of the British Council in north India, said the new visa had been welcomed by the UK’S higher education sector, which realised the benefits of having Indian students. It was hailed by student organisati­ons and the Foreign Affairs Committee of Parliament. Thompson said changes to the Tier 2 skilled worker visa means there is no limit on Phd-level candidates and more of these visas are issued to India than the rest of the world combined. The announceme­nt takes account of the realities of Brexit, including EU citizens not being able to freely take up jobs in the UK after it leaves the EU.

Universiti­es UK chief executive Alistair Jarvis said internatio­nal students bring £26 billion in economic contributi­ons but the lack of post-study work opportunit­ies had put the UK at a competitiv­e disadvanta­ge.

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