Drop in international students could have 'long-term impact' on Australia

There are fears international students will continue to look to study elsewhere unless Australia reopens its borders soon.

Students at Sydney's UNSW.

International students will start returning to Australia in December. Source: AP/Mark Baker

The number of international students applying to study at Australian universities has more than halved while borders remained closed due to COVID-19, new data shows.

Applications by international students to attend Australian universities have dropped 51 per cent since March this year, according to international student recruitment marketplace Adventus. 

The latest government figures for November show there are currently 259,752 student visa holders in Australia, more than half of whom are in higher education or postgraduate research.

The figures also show there are still 148,464 student visa holders outside of Australia.
A New South Wales proposal to bring back international students during the second half of 2021 is being called 'a light at the end of the tunnel'
New data has found that applications for Australian universities from international students have dropped 51 per cent. Source: SBS
Universities Australia deputy chief executive Anne-Marie Lansdown said there had been a 40 per cent decline in commencing international students from pre-pandemic levels.

"The closure of international borders during the COVID-19 pandemic has obviously had an impact on the willingness of international students to enrol at an Australian university," Ms Lansdown said.

"Nonetheless, the fundamental attractiveness of an Australian education has not changed."

Ms Lansdown said she is optimistic a "corner has been turned" as pilot plans have been announced for international students to return to New South Wales, the ACT, Victoria, South Australia and Queensland.
Adventus, which partners with more than 1,500 institutions, found since March applications had grown by 148 per cent in Canada, 150 per cent in the United Kingdom and 422 per cent in the United States, partially fuelled by the platform's growth in those regions.

Adventus chief executive officer Ryan Trainor said students who would have typically chosen Australia as a study destination are looking elsewhere.

"This may have a long-term impact on the country as we have lost nearly two years of students and the flow-on effect may have longer-term implications if the government does not create a united, every-state message to the students worldwide," Mr Trainor said. 


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2 min read
Published 5 November 2021 4:20pm
Updated 5 November 2021 4:23pm
Source: AAP, SBS



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