The UK should introduce a four-year post-study work visa and a target to double the number of Indian students, if it is to remain competitive in global international student recruitment after Covid-19 and Brexit, according to former universities minister Jo Johnson.
In a new report,?Universities open to the world: How to put the bounce back in Global Britain, Mr Johnson says that ¡°universities have been the victim of competing and conflicting government policy objectives in Westminster over much of the last decade¡±, which have included increasing education exports as well as managing down overseas student numbers ¡°in a misguided attempt to reduce overall net migration to below 100,000¡±.
¡°This confusion and ambivalence has created a volatile and unstable policy environment which helps explain why the UK ¨C a perennial world leader in education ¨C has gradually seen its share of the international education market slip over the past?ten years,¡± he says.
The UK government is revising its latest international education strategy, which was published in March 2019 and set UK universities the?target of attracting 600,000 international students?by 2030, an increase of about 25 per cent on current numbers.
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But, in the report, Mr Johnson says that the goal ¡°lacked ambition¡±.
¡°By settling for growth rates significantly slower than the global market for international students had enjoyed over the previous decade (doubling in the past ten years), the targets tacitly accepted a steady loss in UK market share,¡± he says.
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¡°The objectives set by the UK Government for the sector in May 2019 put us on a trajectory that would see our market share halve by 2030 and see the UK fall down the global rankings of destination countries.¡±
He recommends that the UK should set a goal to remain the number one study destination worldwide after the US, double post-study work visas from two to four years and launch a new marketing drive in India to double the number of students from the country by 2024. India should also be included alongside China in the low-risk country category, he says.
Mr Johnson, who is senior fellow at?Harvard University¡¯s Kennedy School and professorial fellow at?King¡¯s College London, also calls for an end to ¡°hostile bureaucracy¡± in the ÁñÁ«ÊÓƵ Office. He says ¡°it should be left to universities, as opposed to the government, to determine required baseline language ability¡± of foreign students, while the government should also delegate the visa processing function to universities too, meaning that institutions could undertake checks on new international students and ¡°effectively attach visa approval to offer letters¡±.
He is the second former universities minister to push for a four-year post-study work visa; Chris Skidmore?called for the policy change?during a?Times Higher Education?webinar in April, saying it could help to reduce the huge slump in international enrolments predicted for the next academic year.
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Speaking to?THE, Mr Johnson said: ¡°The government needs to realise that a two-year post-study work visa ¨C while we?obviously welcomed it a year ago?¨C is sadly no longer going to be competitive in an environment where universities are chasing fewer international students than ever before and in which some countries ¨C and I¡¯m thinking particularly of Canada ¨C have ¡®gone all in¡¯ in terms of going hell for leather after international students.
¡°The competitive environment has changed because of coronavirus and how other countries are responding to the intensification of competition. And we can¡¯t stand still.¡±
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