
Other countries gain as US limits international student enrolment
The U.S. government sparked outrage in the spring by targeting international students who took part in pro-Palestinian protests. Some were threatened with deportation, and the legal status of thousands of international students was suddenly revoked — in some cases over minor infractions like traffic tickets. These moves added to the growing sense of uncertainty among international students in America.
Although the U.S. is still a top destination for higher education, many students are now seriously looking at other countries they may not have considered before. This shift could have lasting consequences for American universities and the broader economy.
One sign of the trouble is that long visa delays in China have led many students to give up on studying in the U.S. entirely. Universities in Hong Kong report a rise in transfer requests from international students currently enrolled in the U.S., while the U.K. has seen a surge in applications for undergraduate programs.
According to a study by NAFSA, an organization that promotes global education, international enrollment in the U.S. could fall by 30 to 40 percent this fall. That would result in an estimated US$7 billion loss to the American economy. Many international students pay full tuition, so their absence also creates financial strain for colleges.
Britain, the second-most popular country for international education, stands to gain. Even as the new Labour government vows to tighten immigration and limit the length of time foreign graduates can stay and work, admissions experts say the U.K. is still seen as the most welcoming among the four major English-speaking destinations: the U.S., the U.K., Canada, and Australia.
Recent numbers back this up. Undergraduate applications from international students to U.K. universities rose 2.2 percent this fall after a drop last year. Applications from China grew 10 percent, and U.S. applications hit nearly 8,000 — a 14 percent rise and the highest in 20 years. Graduate school acceptances from international students also climbed by about 10 percent, especially in business and management programs, according to UniQuest, a firm that works with British universities.
Mike Henniger, CEO of Illume Student Advisory Services, said it will take until the fall to get a clear picture of how significant the shift really is. But already, he said, "the American brand has taken a massive hit — and the U.K. is the one that is benefiting."
In Asia, demand from Chinese students is growing fast for universities in Hong Kong, Singapore, and Malaysia, said Will Kwong of AAS Education, a Hong Kong-based consultancy. Many Western universities have offshore campuses in these regions that are less expensive and easier to access than studying in the U.S. or U.K.
Kwong added that some Asian families no longer see the U.S. as their automatic first choice due to the political climate and visa troubles. Many students are still waiting for U.S. visa interviews and are likely to miss the start of the fall semester.
Still, some remain hopeful. Alisa, a Chinese undergraduate studying data science, plans to attend an exchange program this fall at the University of California, Berkeley. Despite the growing difficulties, she hopes to stay on for a master's degree in the U.S.
But she is also looking into other options, "just so I could still go to school if the extreme scenario occurs," said Alisa, who spoke on condition of partial anonymity out of fear of being targeted.
Hashtags

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


Canada News.Net
an hour ago
- Canada News.Net
OpenAI unveils GPT-5, expands access to advanced AI capabilities
SAN FRANCISCO, California: OpenAI has unveiled GPT-5, the latest version of the technology behind ChatGPT, promising significant gains in enterprise uses such as software development, finance, and health-related queries. The model is now available to all 700 million ChatGPT users. The launch comes at a time of surging investment in AI, with Microsoft-backed OpenAI and rivals like Alphabet, Meta, and Amazon collectively set to spend nearly US$400 billion this fiscal year on AI infrastructure. The question is whether enterprise adoption will justify those costs. "So far, business spending on AI has been pretty weak, while consumer spending … has been fairly robust because people love to chat with ChatGPT," said economics writer Noah Smith. "But … it isn't going to be nearly enough to justify all the money … spent on AI data centers." CEO Sam Altman called GPT-5 "the first time … one of our mainline models has felt like you can ask a legitimate expert, a PhD-level expert, anything." He highlighted its "software on demand" abilities, with demos showing the model creating entire working programs from text prompts—known as "vibe coding." Two early reviewers told Reuters GPT-5 is strong in coding and solving science and math problems, though they felt the leap from GPT-4 was smaller than previous jumps. Altman noted GPT-5 still cannot learn on its own, a key step toward human-level capability. The model incorporates "test-time compute," which lets it spend more processing power on hard questions—technology now available to the public for the first time. GPT-5's release follows scaling challenges. After GPT-4's 2023 debut, which outperformed GPT-3.5 by passing the bar exam in the top 10 percent versus the bottom 10 percent, OpenAI sought further gains by adding compute power and data. But it hit a "data wall," as internet-scale human text datasets ran out. Training large models also risks hardware failures late in multi-month runs. OpenAI's $500 billion valuation goal, up from $300 billion, and reports of $100 million signing bonuses for top AI researchers underscore the high stakes. Altman insists global infrastructure investment is still insufficient: "We need to build a lot more … to have AI locally available in all these markets."


CBC
an hour ago
- CBC
Bick's pickles no longer stocked in some stores due to ‘tariff impacts'
Bick's, a popular Canadian pickle brand assembled in the U.S., is facing a 25 per cent Canadian retaliatory tariff, making its pickles pricier and harder to find. Experts say companies dealing with complex cross-border supply chains have been hit especially hard by the trade war.

Globe and Mail
2 hours ago
- Globe and Mail
Nvidia and AMD to pay U.S. 15% of China chip sale revenues, official says
Nvidia NVDA-Q and AMD AMD-Q have agreed to give the U.S. government 15 per cent of revenue from sales to China of advanced computer chips like Nvidia's H20 that are used for artificial intelligence applications, a U.S. official told Reuters on Sunday. U.S. President Donald Trump's administration halted sales of H20 chips to China in April, but Nvidia last month announced the U.S. said that it would allow the company to resume sales and it hoped to start deliveries soon. Another U.S. official said on Friday that the Commerce Department had begun issuing licenses for the sale of H20 chips to China. When asked if Nvidia had agreed to pay 15 per cent of revenues to the U.S., a Nvidia spokesperson said in a statement, 'We follow rules the U.S. government sets for our participation in worldwide markets.' The spokesperson added: 'While we haven't shipped H20 to China for months, we hope export control rules will let America compete in China and worldwide.' AMD did not respond to a request for comment on the news, which was first reported by the Financial Times earlier on Sunday. The U.S. Department of Commerce did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The Financial Times said the chipmakers agreed to the arrangement as a condition for obtaining the export licenses for their semiconductors, including AMD's MI308 chips. The report said the Trump administration had yet to determine how to use the money. 'It's wild,' said Geoff Gertz, a senior fellow at Center for New American Security, an independent think tank in Washington, D.C. 'Either selling H20 chips to China is a national security risk, in which case we shouldn't be doing it to begin with, or it's not a national security risk, in which case, why are we putting this extra penalty on the sale?' U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said last month the planned resumption of sales of the AI chips was part of U.S. negotiations with China to get rare earths and described the H20 as Nvidia's 'fourth-best chip' in an interview with CNBC. Lutnick said it was in U.S. interests to have Chinese companies using American technology, even if the most advanced was prohibited from export, so they continued to use an American 'tech stack.' The U.S. official said the Trump administration did not feel the sale of H20 and equivalent chips was compromising U.S. national security. The official did not know when the agreement would be implemented or exactly how, but said the administration would be in compliance with the law. Alasdair Phillips-Robins, who served as an adviser at the Commerce Department during former president Joe Biden's administration, criticized the move. 'If this reporting is accurate, it suggests the administration is trading away national security protections for revenue for the Treasury,' Phillips-Robins said.