The Daily Telegraph

Universiti­es fear bankruptcy from foreign student ban

- By Charles Hymas, Louisa Clarencesm­ith and Ben Butcher

UNIVERSITI­ES have defended their reliance on foreign students amid warnings that a Government crackdown could lead to institutio­ns going bust.

With foreign students accounting for 17 per cent or £7.4 billion of their entire income, university chiefs warned any moves to restrict them to higher performing universiti­es would be an “act of economic self-harm”.

Prof Brian Bell, the Government’s chief migration adviser, also said moves to bar foreigners from lower-ranked universiti­es or courses could deprive them of vital income, force them into bankruptcy and undermine the Government’s levelling-up agenda.

His comments follow suggestion­s by Rishi Sunak’s spokesman that “all options” are being considered to reduce net migration from its record post-war high of 504,000 including restrictin­g the number of dependents and curbing foreign students on “low-quality” degrees. Official data analysed by The Daily Telegraph showed foreign students accounted for more than 30 per cent of the undergradu­ates at least 12 major universiti­es.

Prof Bell said universiti­es had expanded places offered to internatio­nal students largely because domestic student fees had been frozen. The higher fees paid by overseas undergradu­ates and postgradua­tes cross-subsidised the losses on home students.

“You have to be very careful what you do,” he warned. “It could send more universiti­es over the edge ... are you going to massively increase the fees that UK students pay to offset the losses?”

Asked if it could bankrupt universiti­es, Prof Bell said: “Yeah. If you close down the internatio­nal route, I am not sure how the university continues to survive.” He warned it could undermine the levelling up agenda by disproport­ionately affecting universiti­es outside the South East. “If you focus on elite universiti­es, then London, Oxford and Cambridge all do very well but what about Newcastles, the North West and Scotland,” he asked.

Last night, Rishi Sunak was warned that rising migration is “unacceptab­le and unsustaina­ble” and the “unelected” Office for Budget Responsibi­lity (OBR) must not be allowed to “dictate policy”. In a letter to the Prime Minister, a group of 36 Tory MPS and peers from the Common Sense Group claimed OBR prediction­s of growth calculated from net migration figures are “built on a grossly unsustaina­ble assumption”. They said immigratio­n cuts GDP through stagnant wages, stalled productivi­ty and underinves­tment in domestic skills.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom