Land of the free hits the highest note on overseas student fees

US is the costliest of 10 countries surveyed, with Australia and UK close behind. John Morgan writes

August 4, 2011



Credit: Reuters


A report on fees charged to overseas students has found that the US is the most expensive of 10 nations surveyed, followed by Australia and the UK, and stressed the need for "competitive positioning" on scholarships.

The study, the first of its kind in the UK, was conducted by consultancy firm i-graduate for the UK HE International and Europe Unit (IEU).

It examined fees for undergraduate, postgraduate taught and postgraduate research courses at universities in 10 key international student destinations, taking a snapshot of four subject areas at four to six institutions in each country.

The US had the highest fees, but perhaps surprisingly, courses cost more at New York University (£24,758 a year for undergraduate history) and at the University of Southern California (£24,945) than at Harvard University (£21,604).

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Fees at Australian universities outstripped those in the UK, even at institutions ranked lower than their UK counterparts, says the report, International Pricing Study: A Snapshot of UK and Key Competitor Country International Student Fees. Overseas fees for an undergraduate history degree at the University of Sydney were £16,474 a year, while at the University of Oxford, an equivalent course cost £12,700.

Fees were lowest in Germany, starting at £509 a year for undergraduate study at the University of Frankfurt. Germany and the Netherlands were the only nations surveyed that offer public subsidies for overseas students' tuition fees.

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The study's authors, i-graduate chief executive Will Archer and project manager Jacqueline Cheng, say that pricing and market intelligence will be increasingly important, and suggest that the "low or non-existent" fees for postgraduate research students in continental Europe, Canada and New Zealand could become key as countries compete for research talent.

But fees are only part of the story, they add, pointing to "significant support for high-quality international students in the form of scholarships (and) fee waivers" offered by some institutions and nations such as the Netherlands and New Zealand.

"More should be done in the UK to attract the most able international students," they say.

The study notes the impending closure of the UK's post-study work scheme for overseas students even as other governments "seize the opportunity to divert great talent from rival destinations".

The estimated costs of living cited by institutions are highest in the US (£18,531 a year at Harvard), followed by Australia and the Netherlands. And recent currency fluctuations have benefited the UK most, making it 10 per cent cheaper for Indian students to study here than it was three years ago, and 24.5 per cent cheaper for Chinese students.

Joanna Newman, IEU director, said the report would enable UK universities to make "quick and easy comparisons, striking the right balance between attracting students and ensuring high-quality programme delivery", and makes clear that the UK is "not the most expensive place to study".

john.morgan@tsleducation.com.

Hard line on soft power: the miserly Anglo-American approach to higher education aid

Spending on higher education aid by the US and the UK is low despite the "soft power" benefits of supporting tertiary education overseas, it has been reported.

The use of aid such as scholarships for foreign study and support for universities in developing countries is assessed in the online education and aid journal Norrag News.

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Citing data from the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development, N.V. Varghese of the United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organisation's Institute for Educational Planning writes that the "UK and the US allocate a low share of their bilateral aid commitments to education and a low share of education aid to higher education".

Dr Varghese says that while aid for basic education was a global priority in the 1990s, this changed in the 2000s, when aid for higher education rose.

In 2007, France was the biggest bilateral donor to higher education ($1.3 billion, mainly for francophone African nations), followed by Germany ($1 billion).

The latest issue of the UK HE International and Europe Unit's newsletter highlights Dr Varghese's conclusions and says that the UK and the US "would do well to examine how others are playing the game".

The UK runs higher education aid projects via the Department for International Development, including Commonwealth Scholarships and the Development Partnerships in Higher Education, but the latter programme expires in 2013.

Kenneth King, editor of Norrag News and emeritus professor of African studies at the University of Edinburgh, writes that nations' aims with scholarships include "cultural or linguistic diplomacy, commercial diplomacy and political diplomacy".

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The Brazilian government last week confirmed that it is to provide scholarships for 75,000 students and researchers to study abroad, an investment of about $2 billion, with the UK hoping to welcome about 10,000 students over four years.

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