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Overseas student total falls ‘for first time’ as Indian numbers collapse

<网曝门 class="standfirst">The number of non-EU students at UK universities fell by 1 per cent last year, the first such decline ever recorded.
Last updated
May 27, 2015
Published on
January 16, 2014

The fall in the number of students from outside the EU in 2012-13, revealed in , will heighten concerns among universities over the impact of the coalition government’s drive to cut immigration.

There was also a 25 per cent drop in the number of Indian first-year students starting courses in 2012-13, following on from a 32 per cent fall the previous year.

That means the number of Indian first-year students starting courses has halved in just two years, falling from 23,985 in 2010-11 to 12,280 in 2012-13.

Universities have warned that the government’s abolition of the post-study work visa was deterring students from coming to the UK, while currency exchange rates are also thought to now be a particular problem for Indians considering the UK.

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India is the second largest source of non-EU students for British universities, behind China. By contrast, the number of Chinese first-year students starting courses in 2012-13 rose 6 per cent.

Until now, the number of non-EU students at UK universities had risen every single year since the Higher Education Statistics Agency began keeping records in 1994-95.

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Universities have become accustomed to continual, significant rises in their income from full-fee non-EU students.

In 2009-10, the number of non-EU students at British universities rose by 12 per cent, and in 2010-11 by 6 per cent.

In 2011-12, the rise slowed to 1.5 per cent, followed by last year’s 1 per cent fall, from 302,680 to 299,970.

Non-EU students made up 13 per cent of the total student population at UK universities in 2012-13, according to the Hesa figures.

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The fall in non-EU numbers was severest in the part-time category, where the fall was 19 per cent. Undergraduate numbers were down 2 per cent.

john.morgan@tsleducation.com

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