Try GOLD - Free
Increasing costs for international students won't help cash-strapped university towns
The Observer
|November 16, 2025
A chancellor with an overriding commitment to growth would not slap an arbitrary tax on one of the country’s most successful export sectors.
By contrast, one with different ambitions might impose such a tax and use the proceeds to prop up politically important spending programmes elsewhere. That's the choice Rachel Reeves will be making in her budget speech later this month, when she announces her decision about the proposed levy on fees paid by international students for studying in English universities.
It’s going to be a clear test of where the government’s economic priorities lie.
The idea first came up last May in the government’s white paper aimed at curbing immigration. Among other things, this listed various abuses in the student visa system and suggested broadly sensible ways of dealing with them. Then it suddenly changed gear. International students, it said, had generated an estimated £20.7bn in exports through living expenditure and tuition fees back in 2021. “But it is right that these benefits are shared.”
This was a strange assertion, given the fact that these fees are already being used to subsidise the heavy losses that universities make both on teaching domestic students and on research. Funding per head for UK students has fallen by more than a quarter in real terms over the last 10 years and the financial gap has been plugged by a sharp increase in the number of foreign students paying higher fees. These now account for roughly a quarter of universities’ overall income, up from a negligible amount 30 years ago.
This story is from the November 16, 2025 edition of The Observer.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM The Observer
The Observer
I wouldn't touch Starmer with a barge pole. He's completely untrustworthy
In the first of a new weekly series in which we ask a public figure to take us on a walk of significance, Rachel Sylvester, our political editor strolls through London's Stoke Newington with Zack Polanski. The leader of the Greens talks about tax hikes, leaving Nato and why former Labour politicians are welcome to join his party
8 mins
November 23, 2025
The Observer
Short-beaked echidna
Old does not mean primitive. Let's get that straight at once. Sure, we're mammals and sure, we lay eggs, which makes us unusual in the late Holocene but that doesn't mean we're backward.
2 mins
November 23, 2025
The Observer
Help with cost of living to make tax smorgasboard easier to swallow
These have been the leakiest, most fevered pre-budget weeks in modern British political history.
4 mins
November 23, 2025
The Observer
It's not easy being green: high energy costs threaten UK's net zero business endeavours
Missed decarbonisation targets, high prices and political uncertainty are seeing Labour's bid to make the nation a clean utility 'superpower' drift off into the ether.
8 mins
November 23, 2025
The Observer
The trail of bad decisions and delays that led to 23,000 avoidable deaths
As the second official report into Britain's Covid response is made public, a story emerges of a government failing to heed warnings and a first lockdown that was too little, too late.
4 mins
November 23, 2025
The Observer
Europeans rush to foil Ukraine deal favouring Kremlin
Kyiv's allies seek to thwart Trump negotiator's peace plan that gives in to Russian demands and turns the screw on embattled Zelensky
4 mins
November 23, 2025
The Observer
'We saw so many bodies that we lost count': uncovering the hidden horror of El Fasher
Using eyewitness reports, satellite images and social media videos, Isabel Coles and Fred Harter record the carnage when RSF fighters seized the famine-stricken capital of Sudan's North Darfur
10 mins
November 23, 2025
The Observer
It's not easy being green: high energy costs threaten UK's net zero business endeavours
Missed decarbonisation targets, high prices and political uncertainty are seeing Labour's bid to make the nation a clean utility 'superpower' drift off into the ether.
6 mins
November 23, 2025
The Observer
My lost afternoon with Elisabeth Lederer
I will come on to the eye-watering price shortly, but let's start with the art. Is the painting any good?
1 mins
November 23, 2025
The Observer
The Lords they are a-leaping as vandals in ermine do their damnedest to frustrate ministers
Andrew Rawnsley
4 mins
November 23, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size

