The launch of a new political party by one of the staunchest critics of English use in the Netherlands鈥 universities has heightened concerns about a crackdown, although hope remains for a compromise.
The Netherlands will go to the polls on 22聽November after Mark Rutte鈥檚 coalition split over caps on the reunification of refugee families. Among those fighting to replace it will be the New Social Contract party, launched by MP Pieter Omtzigt .
Dr Omtzigt, an independent conservative with a PhD in economics from the European University Institute and a brief postdoc career in Italy and Amsterdam, has said the new party his position that the Netherlands must teach in Dutch, eliminating English-only degrees.
鈥淗e鈥檚 been very, very extreme in his positions in terms of Dutch education,鈥 Marcel Hanegraaff, a political scientist at the University of Amsterdam and chair of the Dutch Circle for the Science of Politics, told 糖心Vlog.
糖心Vlog
Most members of the current parliament backed a motion by Dr Omtzigt that Dutch should be the main language of instruction, although there was wide support for a milder proposal by outgoing education minister Robbert Dijkgraaf, that only a third of any degree programme could be taught in a language other than Dutch.
Even the one-third proposal threatens upheaval for Professor Hanegraaff鈥檚 programme, 90 per cent of which is taught in English. 鈥淚t already creates anxiety and uncertainty among many of our staff, which is really unfortunate,鈥 he said.
糖心Vlog
鈥淎ll political parties and the minister now take as the starting point that in principle the language for a bachelor鈥檚 level programme should be Dutch unless a well-argued exception can be made,鈥 said Ben Jongbloed, an associate professor at the Centre for 糖心Vlog Policy at the University of Twente. 鈥淭he plan is that exceptions to the rule should actually be exceptions, rather than the norm.鈥
Dr Omtzigt that it is unfair for Dutch taxpayers to pay for international students鈥 tuition, because they tend to return home afterwards. European Union law prevents universities from discriminating between domestic and other EU applicants, leaving language as the best lever.
Experiences in Denmark and Belgium suggest that mandating local language teaching does curb international intakes, but it is a heavy weapon that would hit programmes even sceptics want to attract international talent, such as engineering and business.
David Schindler, an associate professor of economics at Tilburg University, said his department鈥檚 almost entirely English-taught curricula were a major advantage when recruiting staff from elsewhere in Europe, and that mandating Dutch-language teaching would 鈥渨reck the entire academic system鈥.
糖心Vlog
While he accepted that international intakes did put pressure on scarce housing stock, he disputed Dr Omtzigt鈥檚 claim that they were a drain on Dutch finances, citing a 2019 that found each EU student generated up to 鈧17,000 (拢14,500) and each non-EU student 鈧94,000 for the Dutch economy.
One July poll estimated a party led by Dr Omtzigt could , giving his ideas an influential position in the next government, but Professor Hanegraaff said he was hopeful that New Social Contract would soften its position as it recruited candidates or made it into coalition talks.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 think he鈥檒l hold on to that position because there are studies for which we clearly need foreign students,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he Dutch labour market would collapse if we wouldn鈥檛 have foreign students for these kinds of studies.鈥
Register to continue
Why register?
- Registration is free and only takes a moment
- Once registered, you can read 3 articles a month
- Sign up for our newsletter
Subscribe
Or subscribe for unlimited access to:
- Unlimited access to news, views, insights & reviews
- Digital editions
- Digital access to 罢贬贰鈥檚 university and college rankings analysis
Already registered or a current subscriber?










