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  • European destinations such as Germany, Spain, Italy, France, and the Netherlands are steadily claiming a greater share of the worldโ€™s international students โ€“ especially with China closed and Brexit having increased tuition for EU students thinking of going to the UK

International students continue to broaden the range of countries they consider as possible study abroad destinations. One very recent impetus for this was that, during the pandemic, some countries offered only online and/or remote learning for long stretches of time while others resumed at least some in-person classes earlier on. As we have noted throughout the COVID-19 disruption, even with growing demand for online and hybrid delivery, many students preferred the option for in-person study.

The trend of students switching their preferred destination during the pandemic has contributed to a different competitive context for institutions and destinations. Canada gained share it might not have had the US and especially Australia opened their borders earlier. With only a few exceptions, students still canโ€™t enter New Zealand or China, and Japan was also very slow to reopen. The UK might have lost share due to its confusing border policies in parts of 2020/21 but its improved offer for post-study work rights has proven to be so popular that the country is seeing record numbers of non-EU enrolments.

But overall, it is Europe that has seen a lot more interest from international students in the past couple of years, and despite their regional proximity, different European countries have remarkably different student mixes than each other. Consider the following table showing top markets for the UK, France, and Germany.

The UK saw its international student enrolments climb by 9% in 2020/21 over the previous year to 605,130. Two of the UKโ€™s top markets are in South Asia (Pakistan and India) and two are in East Asia (China and Hong Kong). The UK draws more heavily from Europe for its top ten sending markets than do France or Germany, and it is also seeing substantial growth in Nigerian enrolments over the past two years.

France, which now hosts around 370,000 international students, has only one Asian country in its top tier (China), and not surprisingly attracts large numbers of students from African francophone countries.

In Germany, which has seen foreign enrolments rising throughout the pandemic to about 330,000, Asian representation extends past China and India to the Middle East (Iran and Syria) as well as Russia. Germanyโ€™s top ten list may be the most eclectic of the three countries in terms of its regional diversity with significant numbers of students from Asia, the Middle East, Russia, Europe, and Africa choosing German universities.

Italy

As in Germany, Italyโ€™s international student mix is also quite varied โ€“ the following chart shows top sending markets for 2019/20. In total, Italian universities enrolled close to 100,000 international students in 2020/21.

Source: Statista

Spain

In Spain, meanwhile, Latin America is a major recruitment focus for universities given the Spanish language affinity between the two regions. In 2019/20, 208,370 foreign students were in Spanish universities โ€“ up 12% from 185,145 two years earlier. The following map shows top student markets for Spain.

Leading sending markets for Spain. Source: Studying in Spain

The Netherlands

The Netherlands hosted 12% more international students in 2021/22 than in the previous year for a total of 115,070 according to a new report published by Nuffic, the Dutch organisation for internationalisation in education. Top markets for Dutch universities are mostly European and include:

  • Germany: 24,500
  • Italy: 7,200
  • China: 5,300
  • Belgium: 4,797
  • Spain (4,687)
  • Bulgaria (4,607)
  • France (4,294)
  • Greece (3,862)
  • Poland (3,554)
  • India (3,363)

Current demand factors

European countries other than the UK are seeing increased interest from within the region since Brexit terms ended EU studentsโ€™ ability to access โ€œhome fee status.โ€ Faced with the prospect of paying the same fees as non-EU students for UK higher education, European students are looking around within their own region and finding both highly ranked institutions and relatively attractive tuition fees.

Meanwhile, African and Asian students, who might otherwise have chosen China, Russia, or Ukraine as their top destinations, now find themselves unable or unwilling to go to those countries because Chinaโ€™s borders remain shut and because of Russiaโ€™s war on Ukraine. Other destinations within Europe are quickly becoming more popular for African and Asian students as a result โ€“ not the least because of more affordable tuition at many European universities relative to what students would pay in other leading study destinations, such as Canada or the United States.

For additional background, please see:

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