Clearer residency rules will not necessarily boost overseas studentsโ€™ prospects of remaining in Australia, and consequently may not give the international education industry the fillip it is hoping for, a leading policy analyst has warned.

Australian National University researcher Andrew Norton said changes to migration settings may offer greater clarity but ultimately reduce overseas studentsโ€™ chances of securing permanent residency (PR).

For example, awarding migration rights on the basis of income rather than capacity to fill fluctuating skill shortages โ€“ a move suggested by theย Grattan Instituteย thinktank, which proposes a PR โ€œpathwayโ€ for foreign workers earningย more than A$70,000 (ยฃ40,000) a year in Australia โ€“ could rule out many international students.ย 

โ€œTheir earnings in the time theyโ€™ve got in Australia may not be equivalent to that [threshold],โ€ Professor Norton said. โ€œEven though the rules might be clearer, it doesnโ€™t necessarily increase their chances of getting PR in the long run.โ€

In a keynote address to open a Melbourneย symposium, Professor Norton explored what federal government reviews might mean for Australiaโ€™s international education sector. He highlighted theย migration review, which has been tasked with designing a system to โ€œcomplement Australiaโ€™s education and training systems and the skills of Australiansโ€.

This raised questions including whether international graduates would be included in any degree-completion targets likely to be set under Australiaโ€™s planned universities โ€œaccordโ€, and whether university places might be reserved for Australian students as a mid-2020s demographic bulge pushed up domestic demand.

Professor Norton said the migration review would have far more influence than the universities accord on the international education sector. โ€œEducation does not set migration policy,โ€ he toldย Times Higher Education. โ€œThis needs to be watched carefully from the international education point of view.โ€

Australian international education lobbyists bemoan the lack of transparency in a migration system plagued by opaque visa processing and contradictory post-study work arrangements. While the government has continuallyย boosted work rightsย for overseas graduates, it has maintained a system that forces would-be students to prove that they haveย no intentionย of staying in Australia after graduation.

Professor Norton highlighted other contradictions in the relationship between international education and migration. While it is claimed that as few as 16 per cent of international students remain in Australia after their studies, the possibility of migration motivates around two-thirds to choose Australia as a study destination.

And while some figures suggest that international students are transitioning to PR at lower rates than in the past, others indicate that the number of people moving from student visas to PR has increased.

Professor Norton said demand from international students was strong and government โ€œmigration signalsโ€ were positive. But as the students returned in increasing numbers, so would โ€œoldโ€ controversies around English standards, soft marking and cheating.

Meanwhile, increasing overseas enrolments inevitable meant a lower success rate for those hoping to stay. โ€œUncapped temporary visa programmes and capped [residency] quotas will always limit [the] certainty of PR pathways,โ€ Professor Norton warned.

john.ross@timeshighereducation.com

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