The Hindu (Kolkata)

Grappling with uncertaint­y

As the U.K. enters recession, Indian students in the country face challenges in finding jobs and deal with financial strain

- The writer completed his M.A. in Internatio­nal Journalism from Cardiff University recently.

he U.K.’s economy has officially entered recession, as its GDP contracted by 0.3 % in the fourth quarter 2023. According to reports from Reuters, the recession is the longest run without growth on record as GDP per person shrinks. This has left internatio­nal students from India worried about their future in the face of economic turmoil. Many have expressed their fear of exhausting their poststudy work visa without getting a job.

TJob crisis

Vaishnavi Jawalkar, a student of Media Management from the University of Stirling, says she is worried about her future and is struggling to find a parttime job, let alone a fulltime one. “The U.K. government and the universiti­es made every effort to invite internatio­nal students to pursue worldclass education but have failed to abide by their initial promise of helping students get a job. Taking a loan of nearly ₹25 lakhs has compelled me to compromise on my career and rely on parttime jobs for daily expenses,” she says. “When I arrived in the U.K., nearly 34 renowned universiti­es across the country launched a strike due to issues related to pay and working conditions. Our academics, which we considered our priority, suffered.”

Usually students complete their dissertati­on in August– September and work parttime until they receive their graduation certificat­es, when they start looking for fulltime work. Nikita Shibhate, a student in a Londonbase­d university, points out, “It isn’t practicall­y possible for us to visit India from September to January and then return to apply for poststudy work visas. There is no clarity on what needs to be done after submitting our dissertati­on. After carefully reviewing the situation, I have decided to return to India and drop my plan to work in the U.K, as the cost of living is rising.” She also mentions that many scamsters are using the students’ desperatio­n to find a job to cheat them of money.

Other aspects

Ashutosh Ghorpade, a student from Cardiff University, raises another aspect of the problems students are facing Students are charged for healthcare facilities “but many internatio­nal students go back to India to seek medical treatment because in order to get a medical appointmen­t in the NHSrun hospitals, we have to wait for six months, suggesting a collapse of the U.K.’s health industry.”

Saumitra Kokane, another student from the same university, says that internatio­nal students are not give a comprehens­ive understand­ing of the U.K.’s job market. “Our job applicatio­n is rejected even before it is considered for a screening round. Recession has just made things worse in a job market where internatio­nal students are already struggling to find a place.”

Reports also suggest that a section of students who have got a job have scrapped the idea of accepting sponsorshi­p, due to the rising cost of living and increasing work pressure. Mihica Bakre, who has been working for two years, isn’t keen to extend her visa through sponsorshi­p. “There are multiple things I may miss in India but taking decisions by considerin­g the future of the U.K. is crucial. The job insecurity is constantly hovering around internatio­nal residents.”

Team Invictus from

was the winner of the student track of the third edition of TomorrowLA­B, a business competitio­n conducted by Tata Steel.

The

concluded its first Internatio­nal Moot Court Competitio­n, with participat­ion from 24 law colleges. Hon’ble Justice R. Subhash Reddy, Former Supreme Court Judge, and Narsimha Reddy Anantha, Chairman of Telangana Bar Council, inaugurate­d the event. Ram Manohar Lohiya National Law University,

Lucknow, came first followed by Dharmashas­tra National Law University, Jabalpur.

The sixth edition of the

a national commodity market educationa­l quiz for students, organised by the MCX Investor Protection

Fund (MCXIPF), saw participat­ion from 5900 students from over 485 academic institutio­ns. Ivan Mohanty of IIFT, Kolkata, was declared the winner.

Shuvankari Biswas, Tiyasha Guha, Sohini De y and Subhasree Roy, Class XI students from

won the second prize at the World Scienc e Congress Poster Making

Competitio­n. The students was mentored by Subhro Saha, assistant teacher at Techno India Group Academia.

Prof. Nilam Kaushik of the Strategy area of

has been conferred with the ‘ Young Woman Researcher in Innovation Management’ award at the ninth V enus Internatio­nal Women Awards by the Venus Internatio­nal Foundation for her contributi­on and achievemen­t in the discipline of Management.

MBA students from

took the top three ranks at the 23rd VTU Convocatio­n for the academic year 202223. Thanu G. took home four gold medals along with the first rank in MBA studies across Karnataka, followed by Aishwarya A in second place and Apoorva M.S. coming third.

KPIT Technologi­es announced the winners of

its mobility software design and developmen­t innovation contest. Team GRex from Kongu Engineerin­g College, Perundurai, Tamil Nadu, won the Platinum Award and Team Krenoviant­z from Sri Krishna College of Engineerin­g and Technology, Coimbatore, won the Gold Award.

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GETTY IMAGES/ISTOCKPHOT­O

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