Ex-Tory minister attacks Sunak plan to limit foreign student numbers

Justine Greening argues against move to restrict number of international students at British universities

Justine Greening, the former Conservative education secretary, has attacked Rishi Sunak’s proposals to limit the number of international students at British universities, arguing that the move could have a “severe negative impact” on the country.

In a letter co-signed by 12 university vice-chancellors, Greening urged the education secretary, Gillian Keegan, to make the case against new restrictions on students said to be supported by Sunak in the wake of record levels of inward migration.

“Reducing the number of international students could have a severe negative impact on Britain’s economy, productivity, and our world-leading universities,” Greening said in the letter.

“The obvious cultural contribution and enrichment of UK students’ learning experience is clear, as is the knowledge exchange and research contribution that international students bring to our renowned higher education sector.”

Last month, No 10 said Sunak was looking at new restrictions on international students as a way of reducing immigration, including limits on the range of universities to which they could apply, and on their ability to bring along family members.

The prime minister’s spokesperson said: “We’re considering all options to make sure the immigration system is delivering, and that does include looking at the issue of student dependants and low-quality degrees.”

Greening, who stood down as an MP at the last election, said it was vital that ministers “confirm these plans are off the table as soon as possible”, adding: “The reality is that overseas students pay significantly higher fees, which crucially cross-subsidises the education investment for domestic students.”

The letter warns that restricting international applicants to a small pool of selective universities would undermine social mobility and “risks widening the levelling-up gap in the higher education sector” by taking resources out of areas that need it most.

“It would be counterproductive from an economic growth perspective to restrict international students from studying and building links in the very areas and regions where levelling up is most needed and where businesses particularly need that higher-skilled workforce to grow,” the group said.

The 12 vice-chancellors who signed the letter include the leaders of Southampton and Loughborough universities, as well as Steve West, the vice-chancellor of the University of the West of England and president of the Universities UK group.

The group recommends that Keegan support reforming the UK’s migration statistics so that international students are reported separately from other immigrants.

“With international students included in net migration numbers, the risk is that it gives a distorted picture of the underlying wider reality on overall longer-term migration,” the letter states.

Contributor

Richard Adams Education editor

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Capita undercuts British Council to run Turing student exchange scheme
Exclusive: Government strips council of role in programme, which replaced Erasmus after Brexit

Richard Adams Education editor

08, Dec, 2021 @3:42 PM

Article image
Student visa rethink aims to please both business and Brexiters
Economic considerations appear to have won out over desire to slash migration

Richard Partington

11, Sep, 2019 @2:32 PM

Article image
UK curbs on international student visas would be ‘act of economic self-harm’
University leaders fear billions being lost as a result of battles within government over immigration policy

Richard Adams, Education editor

01, Feb, 2023 @10:37 AM

Article image
UK work visas for foreign graduates to be extended to two years
Government returns to pre-2012 policy that Theresa May called ‘too generous’

Richard Adams Education editor

10, Sep, 2019 @9:30 PM

Article image
English universities over-reliant on overseas students’ fees, report warns
Public accounts committee says institutions ‘potentially exposed to significant financial risks’, with 80 declaring annual deficit

Richard Adams Education editor

14, Jun, 2022 @11:01 PM

Article image
‘Impossible’ for Sunak to save on tuition fees without favouring well-off graduates
Chancellor should use income tax rather than student loan repayments, says Institute for Fiscal Studies

Richard Adams Education editor

20, Sep, 2021 @5:00 AM

Article image
Ministers split over bailout package for universities
Education secretary arguing for cash to offset losses from international tuition fees

Richard Adams Education editor

23, Apr, 2020 @12:50 PM

Article image
Tory hand-wringing for students from the poorest countries is pure hypocrisy | Smita Jamdar
Jacob Rees-Mogg – and even the universities minister – claim raising fees for EU students will help those from further afield. What nonsense

Smita Jamdar

07, May, 2019 @5:45 AM

Article image
Longer work visa could tempt more foreign students to UK, survey finds
Vice-chancellors urge review of two-year visas as overseas graduates say three-year offer would be more attractive

Rachel Hall

30, May, 2022 @5:00 AM

Article image
Theresa May under fire as student visa myth exposed
Prime minister left looking isolated as figures show fewer than 5,000 foreign students stayed on in UK after visas expired

Heather Stewart, Rowena Mason and Jamie Grierson

24, Aug, 2017 @7:06 PM