The US Embassy Charge DโAffaires, Patricia Lacina, presented visas to two students in Mumbai who plan to study abroad in the US this year. According to Lacina, despite the pandemic, the US Mission issued more student visas in 2021 than ever before.
More than 4,000 students attended student visa interviews across India at the US embassy in New Delhi and the Consulate General offices in Mumbai, Chennai, Hyderabad, and Kolkata. Consul General, David J. Ranz, congratulated many of the students that came to Mumbai for interviews.
โA degree from the US can take you anywhere in the world,โ Ranz said. โStudents are a big business for the US, with Indian students contributing more than $8 billion dollars a yearโฆLast year we issued a record 100,000 visa applications to Indian students and might double that number in 2022 according to the numbers with us,โ he added.
โThe US places an immense value on international studentsโฆthis is particularly true in India; in fact, Indians are the second largest group of international students in the US,โ Lacina said.
Lacina added that she believes the international student exchange from India to the US is a โcornerstoneโ of the US-India relationship.
โLast year we issued a record 100,000 visa applications to Indian students and might double that number in 2022 according to the numbers with us.โ
This spike in student visa applications comes after a short decline due to the pandemic, and according to Don Heflin, Minister Counselor for Consular Affairs in India, this increase can be attributed to a number of factors including the status of the Indian economy and the โpent-up demandโ of 2020-2021.
He also shared that they plan to interview more applicants for student visas this summer than they ever have before.
โLast year we had about the right amount of applicants compared to pre-covid years. But we are seeing a surge of interest this year,โ Heflin said.