Tory immigration policies risk over-reliance on
Chinese students, ex-universities minister warns
Exclusive: Chris Skidmore says restrictions on
international students risk a funding crisis
Richard
Adams Education editor
Sun 31 Mar
2024 12.00 EDT
The
Conservative party’s “scorched earth” immigration policies risk UK universities
becoming increasingly reliant on students from China to avoid financial crisis,
a former universities minister has said.
It comes as
estimates suggest 25% of tuition fee income at leading British universities
already comes from China.
Chris
Skidmore, who resigned as a Conservative MP earlier this year, said the new
restrictions on issuing international student visas, and recent threats to undo
the “graduate route” work visas, were sabotaging the government’s own education
strategy as well as efforts to diversify university recruitment away from China
and towards other countries such as India and Nigeria.
Since 2019,
international students have been eligible for a two-year visa after graduating
from a British university, with the Conservative general election manifesto
arguing it would “help universities attract talented young people and allow
those students to stay on to apply for work here”.
But last
month James Cleverly, the home secretary, told the Migration Advisory Committee
to review the graduate route visa for “evidence of abuse”, raising fears that
the Conservative party would use it as an election issue. In January the
government curbed the ability for international students to bring family
members.
Skidmore
said attacking the graduate route visa was “totally counterproductive” for the
UK, and was already causing a drop in student applications after being widely
reported overseas.
“This
[visa] was a manifesto commitment; this is what the Conservatives stood on as a
platform in 2019. And to try to have a scorched earth policy of changing it at
the last moment, as a kneejerk response, is the Reform [party] tail wagging the
dog,” he said.
“This is
going to be economically disastrous for the country if the Tories use their
last couple of months in power to try to pull up the drawbridge to try to stop
international students coming here, when there’s so many constituencies and
regional economies dependent on them.”
Skidmore
added: “I don’t want the Tories, in their dying days in government, to toxify
and to contaminate and poison, permanently, a sector that contributes more than
the oil and gas industry in this country, and is so important for the future.”
The warning
comes as relations between the UK and China have been strained, with
Conservative MPs last week urging the government to take tougher action against
Beijing, and universities told to draw up contingency plans for geopolitical
events – such as a conflict over Taiwan – abruptly cutting off students coming
from China.
Skidmore is
chair of the International Higher Education Commission, an independent group
including vice-chancellors devising a new international education strategy,
including the urgent need to diversify overseas recruitment.
The
commission says the UK is “worryingly reliant” on a shrinking number of
countries for the majority of its student recruitment. Students from China are
concentrated in “high tariff” or selective courses at universities such as
those in the Russell Group, including Oxbridge, Glasgow and University College
London. In 2021, 80% of PhD students from China studied at Russell Group
universities.
Many
universities have been forced to rely on the unrestricted tuition fees from
international students. While domestic undergraduate tuition fees have been
frozen at £9,250 since 2016, leading universities are able to charge about
£26,000 a year for each international undergraduate.
Mark
Corver, the managing director of dataHE, which analyses university finances and
student recruitment, said 25% of the total tuition fee income at the Russell
Group of leading research universities came from Chinese students alone.
“We
estimate that about 25% of total tuition fee income to Russell Group providers
comes from China. So with 25% of income based on a single overseas country,
there’s no doubt about it – however you look at the data – the institutions
have become overexposed or dependent,” he said.
Corver said
the “political logic” of frozen domestic income and unrestricted international
fees had led to the reliance on overseas students, with China seen as a
long-term and reliable source of students.
“This is
what the funding model has shaped universities into doing but I can’t think,
off the top of my head, of a single Russell Group institution that could
happily withstand a 20% to 25% reduction in tuition fee income, which is what
the group as a whole has an exposure to,” Corver said.
A
spokesperson for the Russell Group said the income was needed “to cover the
significant and growing deficits in the government’s funding system for UK
students”, leaving the sector vulnerable to shocks.
“Our
universities recognise that building a diverse international intake is
important to financial resilience and are actively working to diversify student
cohorts. In many cases this has involved institutions cancelling or reducing
marketing activities in some countries and exploring new opportunities for
growth,” the spokesperson said.
UUK
reprt<br>File photo dated 16/07/08 of university graduates. Government
plans for minimum grade requirements to access student loans could
"entrench" the disadvantage of the poorest students, according to
universities.Issue date: Monday May 9, 2022. PA Photo. The Government launched
a consultation on its plans for higher education, including the introduction of
a minimum of two E grades at A-level or GCSE passes in English and maths to
access loan finance. Universities UK said poorer students were more likely to
have lower GCSE and A-level results, but data from the Office for Students had
shown that those with the lowest A-level grades were more likely than average
to complete their courses. See PA story EDUCATION Universities. Photo credit
should read: Chris Ison/PA Wire
“Government
policy choices such as the reintroduction of the graduate route visa have
boosted Russell Group efforts to recruit in new markets. In the last five
years, our members have increased growth in students from India, Saudi Arabia,
the UAE and a range of other countries.
“Unfortunately,
early data this year suggests that recent changes in government rhetoric and
policy, including the ban on postgraduate taught student bringing dependants,
are having an impact on international student numbers. Further restrictions,
such as changes to the graduate route visa, could further threaten
diversification efforts and the sector’s financial resilience.”
The issue
extends beyond the Russell Group, with Skidmore’s commission projecting that
50% of higher education will be funded by international student revenue by
2026. It also found that four out of five higher education providers would face
budget deficits if there was “a gradual or sudden drop in international student
numbers”.
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