
Number of Hong Kong students attending British independent schools drops by 6%
The number of Hong Kong students attending independent schools in the United Kingdom has fallen by 6 per cent, the biggest decline witnessed in recent years, according to an annual census by the sector.
Advertisement
This coincided with the Labour government's introduction of a 20 per cent value-added tax (VAT) on school fees in January.
An education consultant who specialises in assisting Hong Kong students with enrolment in British independent schools said the new tax deterred some parents, despite most private schools absorbing some of the increase by raising fees by only about 12 per cent.
According to an annual census conducted by the UK's Independent School Council, mainland China and Hong Kong remain the largest and second-largest markets, respectively, for international students in British independent schools this academic year.
However, the number of students from Hong Kong dropped this year.
Advertisement
The census, the first survey since the VAT was introduced, was carried out in January this year and covered 1,423 schools, 12 more than last year.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


South China Morning Post
29 minutes ago
- South China Morning Post
Hong Kong's HKUST handling ‘several' Harvard transfer applications
A university in Hong Kong that 'opened its doors to Harvard students' has made an offer of admission to one and is handling several transfer applications after the Trump administration last month barred the US Ivy League school from enrolling international candidates, many of whom are from mainland China. Advertisement At least two other local universities have also received inquiries from affected students. On Wednesday night, US President Donald Trump signed a proclamation 'suspending the entry of foreign nationals' seeking to study at Harvard, citing its failure to address national security risks on campus. HKUST said on Thursday that since its announcement of support two weeks ago, it had received dozens of inquiries from students who had planned to study at Harvard or were already enrolled there. Advertisement 'HKUST is currently processing several transfer applications. An admission offer has been extended to one of the applicants,' a spokesman said.


South China Morning Post
2 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
European Union to China: your ‘impressive rise' must not crush our industries
The European Union 's trade chief Maros Sefcovic has warned China that its 'impressive rise must not come at the expense of the European economy' as the bloc continues to push for Beijing to loosen export controls on rare earths and act on trade diversion. Advertisement Speaking in Brussels on Thursday, two days after meeting Chinese Commerce Minister Wang Wentao , Sefcovic stated that 'China has a responsibility to match its support for multilateralism with full respect for the rules meant to ensure fairness and equity'. 'Hence, our calls on China to address systemic issues affecting Europe and other partners, such as overcapacity, subsidies, market access barriers, critical minerals export restrictions, investment conditions and trade diversion,' the Slovakian official said at the Brussels Economic Security Forum. 'We are committed to rebalancing this relationship and establishing a level playing field in trade and investment, with symmetrical market opening.' Sefcovic met Wang on the sidelines of an OECD ministerial summit in Paris and said he raised as a top priority China's export controls on rare earth minerals and magnets, which have threatened to undermine European industries.


South China Morning Post
2 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
1880 Hong Kong members offered alternative club, but ‘not what we signed up for'
Members of 1880 Hong Kong, a Singapore-based private club that recently shut down after only seven months in operation, have been offered a luxury lifeline by landlord Swire Properties. Advertisement The club told members on Thursday that they would be able to have joining fees waived for The Refinery, a club in Swire's Taikoo Place that is operated by The Peninsula, and a food and drink credit would be provided. But the announcement did not appear to have pacified members, with some preferring a refund of their original joining and subscription fees. Some said they no longer trusted the company and had not given their consent to join the alternative club, which was 'not what we signed up for'. 1880 Hong Kong's email to members on Thursday did not mention whether they would have to pay subscription fees for access to the luxury Swire-owned club. A member at The Refinery told the Post that her joining fee in 2021 was HK$50,000 (US$6,370) and the monthly subscription was HK$1,800, after a tenant discount. Advertisement The email asked members to contact The Refinery directly to accept the offer of full membership.