Last week The PIE reported that home secretary Suella Braverman would be analysing the number ofย dependants international students bring with them to the UK. The Home Office confirmed theย government will set out a plan in the coming weeks to โ€œensure the immigration system supports growth whilst maintaining controlโ€.

In a Telegraph fringe eventย at the Tory party conference this week, the home secretary called for fewer international students to come to the UK to study at specific institutions.

โ€œPoor universities are being bankrolled by studentsโ€

โ€œI think we have too many students who are coming into this country who are propping up, frankly, substandard courses in inadequate institutions. I think poor universities are being bankrolled by students and I would really like to see that number come down.โ€

It is not clear which institutions she was referring to.

Recent research found that tuition feesย from non-EU students represented 17% of UK universitiesโ€™ total income during the 2020/21 academic year.

This is compared to UK-domiciled students, who make up 78% of all UK HE students, who contributed 31% of UK universitiesโ€™ total annual income, while EU students, who made up 6% of total students, contributed 3%. The home secretary did not suggest other sources of funding for the UKโ€™s universities.

Braverman previously told The Sun on Sundayย that โ€œtoo manyโ€ low skilled workers are coming to the UK, and reiterated comments about dependents of international students โ€˜piggybackingโ€™ on their student visas.

โ€œYou can get a student visa and bring family members. I would say if you are coming here for an undergraduate degree, is it justifiable that you bring your family members? No,โ€ย Braverman added at the session on October 4.

On October 3,ย she acknowledged that โ€œstudents are a great thing because theyโ€™re coming here to study and get skillsโ€, but called for โ€œa more discerning, smart approachโ€ on student visas.

The UK met its target of hosting 600,000 international students by 2030 a decade early, which Universities UK International has said should beย seen as a โ€œresounding successโ€ for the government and something to be celebrated rather than being a problem.

โ€œNow is the time to build on the UKโ€™s leading position in international higher education,โ€ย Jamie Arrowsmith, UUKi acting director, said.

โ€œThis does not mean pursuing growth at any cost โ€“ indeed, now that the governmentโ€™s ambition has been met, the focus should be on fostering sustainable growth, diversifying the pool of international students, and maintaining our position as the second most popular destination behind the US,โ€ he continued.

โ€œTo do so, we should continue to welcome international students to the UK, and value the contribution that they โ€“ and their familiesย โ€“ make to our country.โ€

UK stakeholders have said the comments coming from the Home Office bring aย โ€œdepressing sense of dรฉjร  vuโ€.

โ€œListening to Bravermanโ€™s assertions, it all sounds depressingly familiar,โ€ founder and director of Vicky Lewis Consulting Vicky Lewis told The PIE. โ€œBack in the days when Theresa May was home secretary, the rhetoric was similar.โ€

Suella Braverman was appointed Secretary of State for the Home Department on 6 September 2022. Photo: Wikimedia

Theresa May was home secretary fromย 2010 to 2016 and leading the department when the UKโ€™s post-study work offer was repealed in 2012.

In the seven years after the opportunity was restricted, the UK treasury lostย just over ยฃ1 billion inย tax. The restriction was also blamed for a sharp drop in numbers of international students opting to study in the UK, particularly from South Asia.

The 2019 announcement thatย post-graduation work rights would be reintroduced for theย 2020/21 academic year led to โ€œjust under 20% year-on-year growthโ€ in 2019. It has been widely welcomed by the sector as adding to the UKโ€™s attractiveness.

โ€œI think many people both within and outside the higher education sector will be surprised to see international students cited as another instance of the need to control immigration, infelicitously in the same interview where the home secretary talks about โ€˜foreign paedophiles, murderers and other convicted criminalsโ€™,โ€ saidย Mike Winter OBE director International Affairs,ย University of London.

โ€œThis seems to ignore the governmentโ€™s own International Education Strategy, which highlights the benefits that international students bring to the UK. Aside from the well-known economic impact of inward recruitment, there is the very significant soft power that these networks and relationships bring long after the students have returned home,โ€ he told The PIE.

The UK International Education Strategy โ€“ updated in 2021 โ€“ย promised to โ€œboostโ€ the countryโ€™s education exports to reachย ยฃ35 billion annually by 2030.

Policy manager at UUK, Harry Anderson also pointed out that a cabinet office press release stated that the GREAT โ€˜Study UKโ€™ campaign is set to generate ยฃ407m of investment right across the UK from international students registered in 2021/22.

โ€œUK higher education rightly has a global reputation for quality, not only in attracting talent to Britain, but also in our very considerable transnational provision. This should be further enhanced, not undermined,โ€ Winter added.

โ€œOnce again, the Home Office appears to be pulling in the opposite direction to other government departments,โ€ Lewis continued.

โ€œUntil recently, there was cross-government consensus (evidenced by the UK International Education Strategy) that recruiting international students was a positive thing. Now that hard, consensus-building work is at risk of being undermined.

โ€œBraverman seeks to link her concerns about the numbers of international students coming to the UK to the โ€˜agenda for growthโ€™, questioning whether they are contributing economically.โ€

However this position ignores evidence showing theyย contribute at leastย ยฃ28.8bn per year to the UK economy, as well as theย cross-subsidy their fees provide for research that โ€œwill help power economic growth, not to mention the wider benefits they bring to our communitiesโ€,ย Lewis added.

Ruth Arnold, who confounded the #WeAreInternational campaign, highlighted that international students are โ€œfundamental to the success of our universities and a key source of strength in the UK economyโ€.

โ€œIt would be dangerous to in any way undermine the consensus of cross-department backing for an explicitly pro-growth International Education Strategy,โ€ she warned.

โ€œA globally competitive welcome for international students is vital to UK universitiesโ€™ ability to recruitโ€

โ€œA globally competitive welcome for international students is vital to UK universitiesโ€™ ability to recruit and retain the talent they need to be global leaders, especially given the major cross subsidy of high cost subjects, research and civic benefit.

โ€œTo risk that would be potentially economically and educationally shooting ourselves in the foot, so it is essential those parts of government focused on economic growth and the HE sector work together to hold the line on the UKโ€™s recent successes in welcoming international students. Iโ€™m confident every effort is being expended to ensure that remains the case.โ€

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