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International researchers eye UK exit over health surcharge hikes

<榴莲视频 class="standfirst">Anger over ‘double-taxing’ of foreign researchers thanks to ?1,000-plus levy is causing scientific talent to explore job opportunities outside the UK, warn scientists
八月 31, 2023
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Early career researchers are already considering leaving the UK over “excessive” and “unfair” increases to health surcharges and visa fees due to be confirmed this autumn, scientists have warned.

Under plans announced by Rishi Sunak in July, the annual immigration health surcharge will increase from ?624 to ?1,035 for main applicants, and to ?776 for child dependants from this autumn, while visa fees will rise by 15?per cent.

At present, the total cost for an international researcher applying for a five-year visa, who is bringing a partner and two children, is ?15,880, according to Universities?UK (UUK), of which ?10,940 relates to the immigration health surcharge (IHS).

That would increase to , and ?18,110 for the health surcharge alone when Mr Sunak’s plans are enacted – equating to about ?4,700 a year, or about 14?per cent of the pre-tax annual salary of a postdoc on ?35,000.

The increases, which will be , are likely to “severely test” the government’s ambition of attracting overseas researchers and innovators, UUK has warned. Others claim the hikes will undermine Britain’s plan, announced in its 2021 R&D strategy, to .

Robert Insall, professor of mathematical and computational cell biology at the University of Glasgow, said awareness of the additional costs imposed on international researchers was starting to deter scientific talent from coming to the UK.

“People are writing to me saying ‘why should I?send my best postdocs to the UK’ when they are being treated like this,” Professor Insall told Times Higher Education.

One of his team was actively seeking positions in laboratories outside the UK given the scale of visa fees and health surcharges, he added.

“One of my postdocs has a stay-at-home wife and two children, and he is getting clobbered by these charges. Someone on my professorial wage might be OK, but it’s absolutely slaying his salary as a postdoc. He will be leaving the UK for another job as soon as it becomes available rather than paying these charges,” continued Professor Insall.

Nino L?ubli, president of the University of Cambridge’s Postdoc Society, which represents about 4,000 early career researchers, said the “current visa and IHS costs are already a substantial financial burden for many within the community.”

“Unfortunately, cases of postdocs required to take out loans or getting into debt to cover the costs for themselves or their families [are] not isolated,” continued Dr L?ubli.

“I would not be surprised if an increase in IHS puts further stress on the already tense and challenging situation related to the UK’s recruitment and retention of highly educated academic and research staff,” he added.

Several UK universities, including UCL, have committed to pay the visa costs of job applicants, although this is not a sector-wide practice, and health surcharges are generally not covered. International scholars say the total cost of renewing a two-year visa for a single person can exceed ?2,000, once hidden admin costs are included, and legal fees can cost the same amount.

Ana Braz, a materials scientist from Brazil who is now working in the pharmaceutical sector, said she paid ?1,200 in 2015 when applying for a visa to study for a PhD at the University of Nottingham but is worried that today’s costs would have been unaffordable. “My family’s entire income was ?800 a?month, so it was a huge expense, particularly as I?had to fly four hours to the nearest visa office in S?o Paulo, which cost another ?250.”

“I was lucky because my scholarship later covered these costs, but not everyone is in this privileged position,” said Dr Braz, who has helped , which has attracted nearly 17,000 signatures.

With the health surcharge rising above ?1,000 a?year, many postgraduates, doctoral researchers and postdocs now viewed the levy as “unfair” and “excessive”, continued Dr Braz. “We are being double-taxed as international staff already pay taxes on our earnings like British nationals,” she said. Many employers were also overlooking international PhDs because sponsoring their visa costs had become too expensive, added Braz. “When you apply to small companies, in particular, you just don’t hear back because they know about these costs, which places foreign applicants at a huge disadvantage,” she said.

In a , the government said the 榴莲视频 Office “does not make a profit from visa fees”, which are used to cover the “wider cost of running the migration and borders system”, while the health surcharge had been reviewed to “ensure it reflects the genuine cost to the NHS of providing healthcare to IHS payers”.

jack.grove@timeshighereducation.com

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<榴莲视频 class="pane-title"> Reader's comments (1)
I argued for ages that the UK universities suffered from two factors w/r to foreign staff (https://theconversation.com/the-summer-when-working-in-a-british-university-lost-its-global-appeal-63431). One was low salaries relative to North American and Asian alternatives and the cost of living and the second was visa fees. As a research dean in prior employment, I successfully convinced my university to cover visa and ILR costs -- however they only did so for the employee and not their family (effectively meaning it was a tax on families but at least a step in the right direction). When I moved to Australia in the 1990s all of my and my family's visa costs were covered by the university. Ditto when I worked in Denmark and Germany. Ultimately, universities end up being collateral damage w/r to policies that are ill thought out and you end up with a situation where the left and right hands are moving in opposite directions and generally unconnected to a brain. No doubt other highly skilled internationally benchmarked knowledge based industries will also feel the pain from these policies, but for universities it makes all of the government rhetoric about 'world-class' this and 'world-beating' that little more than a euphemism of creeping mediocrity achieved one lost young academic at a time.