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A Linchpin Of American Higher Education Funding Is At Risk
A Linchpin Of American Higher Education Funding Is At Risk

Forbes

time3 days ago

  • Business
  • Forbes

A Linchpin Of American Higher Education Funding Is At Risk

​​ -And 2026 Could Be Worse While headlines scream about a potential 40% collapse in new international student enrollment for Fall 2025 – translating to a 15% overall drop, 150,000 fewer students, $7 billion in lost revenue, and 60,000 vanished jobs according to a recent report by NAFSA, The Association of International Educators, American universities face a far more insidious long-term threat. The true crisis isn't just the immediate shock to the Class of 2029; it's the accelerating exodus of talent, particularly from China and India, towards competitor nations in 2026-2027 and beyond. The pipeline sustaining a critical revenue stream and global academic standing is springing leaks that may prove impossible to plug. The Immediate Crunch: Visa Chaos and Plummeting Interest The mechanisms driving the 2025 decline are stark: The economic impact is geographically widespread but deeply concentrated: California faces a potential $1 billion hit, New York $988 million, Massachusetts $619 million, Texas $388 million, and Florida $243 million. Beyond 2025: The Looming Structural Shift The greater peril lies beyond the immediate enrollment cliff. The combination of persistent visa hurdles, perceived hostility, and aggressive recruitment by competitor nations is fundamentally altering the aspirations of the next cohort of international students, especially from the two largest sending countries: China and India. Vulnerable Institutions: Not Just the Obvious Suspects While elite, well-endowed universities will feel the pain (Columbia, NYU, Northeastern, USC, CMU, and Illinois CU all have high international undergrad populations), they possess larger buffers. The existential threat is to a different tier. A Brookings study found that these colleges are most at risk: The Bleeding Has Already Started This isn't theoretical: The Unsustainable Model Exposed International students contributed over $44 billion to the U.S. economy in 2023-24 – more than Disney's global revenue. They are not merely students; they are full-fee-paying customers subsidizing the education of domestic students and university operations. At private institutions, where discount rates for domestic students often exceed 50%, international full-pay students are the linchpin keeping the financial model afloat. Public universities rely on their premium tuition to offset stagnant state funding. A Call Beyond Expedited Visas While NAFSA rightly calls for expedited F-1/M-1/J-1 processing and exemptions from travel bans for students (with security checks intact), this addresses only the immediate 2025 logjam. The deeper challenge requires a fundamental shift: The $7 billion crisis of 2025 is severe. But the silent hemorrhage of future talent pipelines threatens to inflict a slow, debilitating wound on American higher education's finances, global competitiveness, and intellectual vitality. If the students from Beijing, Hyderabad, Lagos, and São Paulo stop dreaming of American degrees by 2026, the foundations of the system itself begin to crumble. The linchpin isn't just at risk; it's being actively pried loose.

Unlike Trump, ancient China embraced foreign students and even made exams easier for them
Unlike Trump, ancient China embraced foreign students and even made exams easier for them

South China Morning Post

time28-06-2025

  • Politics
  • South China Morning Post

Unlike Trump, ancient China embraced foreign students and even made exams easier for them

Foreigners who are thinking of enrolling in American universities are having second thoughts or cancelling their plans outright following President Donald Trump's attempts to cut funding to Harvard University and block it from enrolling foreign students. A few months ago, my nephew, an undergraduate at the National University of Singapore, was considering applying to an American university for his exchange programme in 2026. Now, he is looking at universities in the United Kingdom, Australia and China. Imperial China's highest institutes of learning were not just for locals. For centuries, when China was the civilisational lodestar in the region, people from all over Asia came to study in its universities and try their luck in the famously tough imperial examinations. Some did very well. Harvard filed a lawsuit against the Trump administration in April, following threats to the university's federal funding. Photo: AFP To make it easier for foreign candidates, the Tang dynasty government created a special examination category in 627 that was basically a separate track just for foreign scholars.

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