糖心Vlog

Chinese students undeterred from study Down Under

International recruitment set to rise in Australia as visa applications rebound

Published on
May 27, 2018
Last updated
May 29, 2018
china fair australia
Source: Getty
Steady progress: the number of visa requests from China climbed by 22 per cent in April, including a 14 per cent rise in applications for university study

Australia鈥檚 education exports have continued to defy the doomsayers, with interest surging from would-be students 鈥 including from the crucial Chinese market.

Applications to study in Australia have rebounded聽after a flattening of demand earlier this year, with the number of student visa requests lodged in April 鈥 the latest month for which data聽are available 鈥 up 20聽per cent on聽last year.

The number of visa requests from China聽climbed聽by 22聽per cent, including a 14聽per cent rise in applications for university study. Chinese interest in vocational education more than doubled.

The 聽suggest that the appetite for international education has not plateaued despite two lukewarm months. The number of visa requests in February and March聽was in essence unchanged from last year, with Chinese applications down slightly in February.

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Australian universities are terrified of a downturn in Chinese enrolments, which cross-subsidise other activities, particularly at the research-intensive Group of Eight institutions. There are fears that a cocktail of complaints 鈥 from protests about student safety to political tensions over the South China Sea and proposed foreign interference laws 鈥 could stifle student flows.

Education Department enrolment 聽suggest that the industry is booming, with 7聽per cent more international students starting studies between January and March聽compared with聽the same period last year. The number of commencing Chinese students was up 10聽per cent overall and up by 15聽per cent in higher education.

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However,聽these data聽reflect student decisions made before tensions escalated. The Department of 糖心Vlog Affairs visa application statistics are a better lead indicator of where the industry is going, showing how Chinese students and their parents have reacted to criticisms of Australia in the Chinese media and safety warnings from China鈥檚 embassies.

Dean Forbes, a former Flinders University deputy vice-chancellor now working with the private higher education sector, said that enrolment growth had continued unabated over the past few years. 鈥淚t鈥檚 steady progress,鈥 he said. 鈥淣o聽one鈥檚 baulking from the Chinese market.鈥

But while the visa figures suggest continuing growth, it appears to be uneven. Anecdotal reports suggest that Chinese enrolments have 鈥渇allen off a cliff鈥 at some metropolitan institutions.

Meanwhile, tensions continue to cloud the bilateral relationship. In the latest development, Chinese-Australian billionaire Chau Chak Wing 鈥 a major university benefactor 鈥 was accused in Australia鈥檚 parliament of helping to bribe a high-ranking United Nations official.

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The allegation drew protests in China, while 聽demands that the University of Sydney return an A$15聽million (拢8.5聽million) donation from Dr Chau to bankroll a museum bearing his name.

Other Chinese grievances, such as claims that Australian officials are stymieing the processing of Chinese students鈥 visas, appear unfounded. The 鈥済rant rate鈥 for Chinese visas is at near-record levels, with聽about 97聽per cent of applications proving successful.

Safety worries spurred by violent incidents in Canberra and Melbourne also appear not to be having an effect. School shootings聽in the US have not stemmed student flows there, with the latest 糖心Vlogland Security Department 聽showing that Chinese student numbers have聽risen by 2聽per cent.

Professor Forbes said that the current geopolitical tensions 鈥 particularly the power struggle between the US and China 鈥 were 鈥渦nprecedented鈥 in the era of mass international education, and the industry was bound to be affected.

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But while concerns about Chinese influence in Australia were justified, they had been overstated. 鈥淭here is always that opportunity to dramatise it a bit too much, and I think Australia is going that way.鈥

john.ross@timeshighereducation.com

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