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Under Trump, U.S. is losing foreign students
Los Angeles Times
|September 01, 2025
One international student after another told the University of Central Missouri this summer that they couldn't get a visa, and many struggled to even land an interview for one.
LEE University expects fewer foreign students this fall compared with last year.
Even though demand was just as high as ever, half as many new international graduate students showed up for fall classes compared with last year.
The decline represents a hit to the bottom line for Central Missouri, a small public university that operates close to its margins with an endowment of only $65 million. International students typically account for nearly a quarter ofits tuition revenue.
“We aren't able to subsidize domestic students as much when we have fewer international students who are bringing revenue to us,” said Roger Best, the university’s president.
Signs ofa decline ininternational students have unsettled colleges around the U.S. Colleges with large numbers of foreign students and small endowments have little financial cushion to protect them from steep losses in tuition money.
International students represent at least 20% of enrollment at more than 100 colleges with endowments of less than $250,000 per student, according to an Associated Press analysis. Many are small Christian colleges, but the group also includes large universities such as Northeastern and Carnegie Mellon.
The extent of the change in enrollment will not be clear until the fall. Some groups have forecast a decline of as much as 40%, with a huge effect on college budgets and the wider U.S. economy.
Foreign students face new scrutiny
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