The Telegraph UK (May 30, 2012)
 
Immigration crackdown will damage universities, PM told
A Coalition crackdown on immigration risks deterring legitimate foreign 
students and robbing the country of billions of pounds worth of investment, 
universities warn today.Universities UK is calling on the Government to change 
the way it classifies foreign students. 








By Graeme Paton, Education Editor

12:01AM BST 30 May 2012


The heads of universities across Britain suggest that a toughening up of rules 
surrounding student visas may drive bright applicants towards institutions in 
other countries. 

In a letter to David Cameron, they call on the Government to remove university 
students from net migration figures to help drive the economy and boost 
university income. 

It follows fears that students are being unfairly targeted as part of a 
Coalition drive to cut overall levels of immigration. 

The letter has been signed by 68 chancellors, governors and university 
presidents, including those representing a number of elite Russell Group 
institutions, such as Birmingham, Nottingham, Manchester, Warwick, Leeds, York, 
University College London and the London School of Economics. 

Signatories include Sir Richard Lambert, former head of the Confederation of 
British Industry and chancellor of Warwick, Lord Bragg, the broadcaster and 
Leeds chancellor, and the former BBC director-general Greg Dyke, the chancellor 
of York. 

It has also been signed by Sir Menzies Campbell, the former Lib Dem leader and 
St Andrews chancellor, Baroness Bottomley, the former Conservative cabinet 
minister and chancellor of Hull, and Lord Tugendhat, the Tory peer and 
chancellor of Bath University. 

The letter – circulated by Universities UK – says that Britain currently 
attracts around one-in-10 foreign undergraduates and postgraduates who study 
outside their home country. This generates around £8bn a year for the nation in 
tuition fees and other investment, it is claimed, with the total expected to 
more than double by 2025. 
But UUK told the Telegraph that many risked being pushed to other countries 
such as the United States, Australia, Canada and Germany. 
Today’s letter says: “In this Olympic year, when our universities will be 
hosting athletics teams and media from across the globe, we urge you to send a 
clear message that genuine international students are also welcome in, and 
valued by, the United Kingdom.” 
Figures published last week showed that annual net migration to Britain 
currently stands at a record high of 250,000 a year. 
But the Government has pledged to cut the total to below 100,000. 
Currently, university students are counted towards the figures and it is feared 
that ministers can only achieve the goal by targeting legitimate undergraduates 
and postgraduates. 
In particular, universities are concerned at a series of changes to the student 
visa system that they claim are accumulating to deter foreigners from studying 
in Britain. 
This includes banning students from remaining in the country after graduating 
unless they earn at least £20,000 in a skilled job, preventing them from taking 
degrees or MAs that last for more than five years, requiring them to provide 
evidence of progression through their course and cracking down on dependents. 
They claim some universities have already seen the number of applications from 
India drop by a third this year. 
Nicola Dandridge, UUK chief executive, said that the “cumulative effect of all 
these changes is to present a picture of the UK as not welcoming international 
students”. 
“As competitor countries start to introduce visa changes to attract more 
international students and academics, we have real concerns about the situation 
in the long term,” she said. 
"Although the UK continues to have one of the strongest higher education 
systems in the world, in recent years, we have already started losing market 
share in the face of growing competition globally. 
"The reality is that countries such as the US and Australia are taking active 
steps to encourage international students and are communicating a very 
different message.... It is clear that international students at universities 
should not be treated as permanent migrants, since the vast majority of them 
leave the UK at the end of their studies.”
The letter to the Prime Minister welcomes the government’s move to improve 
border controls and “counter any abuse of the student visa route”. Since the 
Coalition came to power ministers have launched a crackdown on bogus language 
colleges suspected of allowing hundreds of thousands of economic migrants into 
Britain.
However, universities fear they may not be able to take advantage of what they 
believe is a growing market. As well as bringing in money “international 
students also play an important role in towns and cities up and down the 
country and contribute significantly to local economies” the letter states.
They “also bring significant cultural richenss and long-term political and 
social benefits to this country, and return many benefits to the countries 
which they come from,” the universities write.
However, they warn they face increasing competition from a number of other 
countries to attract them. To address this the letter calls on the Government 
to stop counting foreign university students as migrants - as some other 
competing countries do.
“Global competition for international students is intense and a number of other 
countries are increasing their efforts in this area,” it says.
“We therefore ask you to consider how your government can do more to support 
our universities in their international activities. In particular we request 
that international university students be removed from the net migration 
statistics for policy purposes, bringing us into line with our major 
competitors.
“We believe this would help government by creating a clear differentitaion 
between temporary and permanent migration, help universities whose 
international character is essential to their future success, and help the UK 
by contributing to economic growth.”
A recent report from the National Audit Office found that between 40,000 and 
50,000 people illegally gained access to Britain after a new visa system was 
introduced in 2009.

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