The rapidly changing landscape of international student mobility to the UK

Read the full article

Discuss this preprint

Start a discussion What are Sciety discussions?

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

International student mobility (ISM) is a critical component of the global migration system,with profound implications for higher education financing, soft power, and geopolitical relations.Within this, the UK is the second leading destination for international students, but its positionis under mounting pressure. Using administrative data from the UK’s Colleges and AdmissionsService (UCAS) covering applications from 86 countries between 2010-2024, we apply machinelearning forecasting to project undergraduate applications through to 2030. Our approachproduces disaggregated, country-level forecasts based on the timeliest data. Our findings revealevidence of the emergence of an increasingly concentrated system: China, India, and the EU,despite the EU’s dramatic post-Brexit decline, will comprise of over 60% of applications by2030. This trend reflects a concentration paradox, where growth in successful applications fromthese blocs is expected to slow but reliance intensifies, increasing system vulnerability to policyvolatility and geopolitical shocks. These results underscore vulnerabilities in the UK highereducation system and hold important insight for migration governance systems and institutions.

Article activity feed