US Colleges report drop in international students The continued decrease in students from abroad will negatively affect U.S. students and the American economy.

By David L Di Maria
University of Maryland, Baltimore County
FOR the fourth year in a row, the number of international students enrolled at U.S. colleges and universities has declined. This is according to data released this month by the State Department and the Institute of International Education.

The fact that the decline largely took place during Donald Trump’s presidency is no mere coincidence. The Trump administration has tightened restrictions on who can study here and has also sent signals that students from abroad are not welcome.

As the Trump administration comes to an end, the new international enrolment data serve as sort of a failing grade for an administration that claimed international education would be a top priority. The Trump administration also made commitments to increase the number of international students in the U.S. and boasted of having spent more on recruiting international students than any other administration in history.

Important as it is to have global perspectives at American colleges and universities, the steady decline in international enrolment is about more than that. As a specialist in international education, I know that the continued decrease in students from abroad will negatively affect U.S. students and the American economy.

There are currently just over one 1 million international students studying in the U.S. This has been the case since 2015. This current figure includes 851,957 students enrolled at higher education institutions and 223,539 people engaged in Optional Practical Training, a programme that allows recent international graduates to remain in the U.S. temporarily to obtain work or volunteer experience related to their major, according to data I analysed from the Institute of International Education.

The Optional Practical Training is important to consider when you examine trends in international enrolment in the era of Trump. The reason is that the true impact of the Trump administration on international enrolment is masked by Obama-era policies that permitted more international students to remain in the U.S. for longer periods through the Optional Practical Training program.

As these people complete their training programs, the total number of international students will likely once again dip below the 1 million mark.

While the students came from more than 220 countries and territories, China and India accounted for 53 percent of the total, the data show.

About one-third of international students 34.8 percent — enrolled in graduate-level coursework. The next-biggest group was those enrolled in bachelor’s degree programs – 33.1 percent. Associate degree and non-degree studies accounted for 5.9 percent and 5.4 percent, respectively, of international student enrolment in the U.S. The remaining 20,8 percent were participating in Optional Practical Training.

Just over half of all students from abroad 52 percent pursued majors in science, technology, engineering and mathematics, or STEM.

At the undergraduate level, 83.9 percent of international students rely on personal and family income to pay for their education in the U.S.

Five percent rely on a foreign government or university, and 0,4 percent rely on a foreign private sponsor. In all, 89,3 percent are pumping money from abroad into the U.S. economy, while the remaining 10,7 percent rely primarily on funding from a U.S. source.

At the graduate level, 60,7 percent of international students rely primarily on international funds, since 36,5 percent received funding from their college in the U.S. These graduate students usually get this funding in exchange for helping faculty with grant-funded research projects or helping teach undergraduate courses in their discipline. The remaining 2.8 percent received funding from other U.S. sources.

Most of the money spent by international students — 55 percent is spent within the higher education sector. This in turn helps colleges support high- tech academic programmes. It also helps keep tuition lower for students from the U.S.

But a drop in international students doesn’t hurt just colleges’ bottom lines — it harms local economies as well.

When you subtract all funding from U.S. sources, one analysis found, international students still contributed US$38,7 billion to the U.S. economy in 2019. These dollars supported 415,996 American jobs, based on an economic analysis.

Also, consider that 18 percent of every dollar spent by international students goes to apartment rentals and other forms of accommodation; 11 percent goes to restaurants, 9 percent to retail and the rest to other sectors of the economy.

No matter how you slice the data, the fact remains that international students make positive contributions to the U.S. economy. In fact, 1 in 4 $1 billion startup companies in the U.S. had a founder who first arrived on a student visa.

Many international students have reacted positively to the victory of President-elect Joseph Biden and Vice President-elect Kamala Harris.

Nevertheless, I believe it will take years to reverse the trend of declining international enrolment that intensified under Trump. It is true that there was a decline during the last year of the Obama administration, but that was mostly due to the fact that the Brazilian and Saudi governments curtailed major study-abroad scholarship programmes for their citizens. This resulted in a drop of 10,586 in Brazilian students and 8,670 fewer Saudi students between 2014 and 2016.

The situation got worse as the U.S. came to be seen by international students as an unwelcoming nation under Trump. The Institute of International Education also partnered with nine other higher education associations to assess international student enrolment amid the Covid-19 crisis. The most alarming facts from the survey are a 43 percent drop in new international student enrolment and a 16 percent reduction in total international enrolment in the fall of 2020.

The study also found that 1 in 5 international students are reportedly studying online from abroad, and roughly 40 000 international students have chosen to defer their enrolment to a future term.

All said, the findings reflect a lot of uncertainty for the future of U.S. colleges, which were already before the Covid-19 pandemic began — anticipating that  overall enrolment will drop by more than 15 percent after the year 2025 because of record-low birthrates in the U.S. that began in 2008 and continue to this day.

Some experts attribute this decline in the birthrate to the 2008 financial crisis. People may simply have delayed having children or had fewer children because of that era’s economic hardships. And 17 years later, in 2025, there are bound to be fewer students and more empty seats in college classrooms.

The economic impact of the Covid-19 pandemic is estimated to be three times worse than the 2008 financial crisis. Consequently, colleges could experience another major decrease in overall enrolment caused by similar demographic changes by 2037.

Success in recruiting students from abroad will be key to offsetting these declines. TheConversation.com

 

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