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Look East. Act East. Study East.
The New Indian Express Kollam
|September 08, 2025
The traditional westward migration of Indian students seeking quality higher education is seeing a quiet, significant shift.
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From Singapore's growing campuses to South Korea's tech-driven universities, East and Southeast Asia are emerging as attractive alternatives to the US and UK, offering a mix of academic excellence, affordability, and cultural familiarity. The shift is already visible in enrollment figures; Singapore hosts nearly 17,000 Indian students, South Korea around 3,500, Japan over 1,000 and Malaysia close to 4,000, suggesting fundamental changes in how Indian families view global education, according to Praneet Singh, AVP at upGrad Study Abroad. "The pivot towards Asia is not temporary," he emphasizes. "Leading global universities are setting up joint or satellite campuses across China, Singapore, and Malaysia, signaling long-term confidence in the region."
While cost matters—40 per cent of postgraduates plan study abroad at Rs 15-20 lakh—the appeal runs deeper. Asian universities are innovating in ways the West is racing to match. Dinesh Gajendran, Catalyst & Executive Director, Audacious Dreams Foundation, points to deliberate, state-driven reforms: "If you look at the last decade, East and Southeast Asia have treated higher education almost like nation-building... Countries like South Korea's 'Brain Korea 21' initiative and China's 'Double First-Class University Plan' have injected billions to create world-class research universities." The result is that Asian institutions now set benchmarks in fields like AI, biotech and semiconductors. Seoul National University works with Samsung and Hyundai; Singapore's MIT Alliance for Research and Technology models collaboration yielding immediately applicable research.
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