Showing posts with label foreign students. Show all posts
Showing posts with label foreign students. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Abroad Craze of Indian Students


Indians are found every corner of the world. Be it students or workers or high profile intellectuals. The student category of abroad goers is endlessly increasing. There is an annual growth of 10-12%. There are about 94,200 Indian students in USA alone in the Fall (August) 2008. This is 17% of the international students currently studying in USA. Chinese students are second to Indians at 13%. The United Kingdom comes second with 20,000 students.

There are several push factors behind the exodus of Indian students to foreign countries. The international value of foreign degree, presumed high quality of the degree, scholarships availability, possibility of good saving after expenditure and high employability after the degree makes Indian students to choose foreign countries for studies. Generally middle class families sent their children abroad for higher studies. This may be for post graduate degree course and above. Upper caste families sent their children abroad for schooling and undergraduate courses.

With the recession affecting the corporate sector and its spill over effect on the other social arenas, the number of abroad going students may come down in the near future. But as in other cases Indian mentality cannot be predicted that easily. It may work on the other way around. The Indian student community may take advantage the crisis and may go in huge numbers to break the historic records. If the tuition fees in colleges and universities are brought down due to the recession

There is also a threat that scholarships will be cut down and number of financial aids will be down to rock bottom. Due to the endowment fund cuts by the corporate sector to universities the latter may have to reduce the number of scholarships. According to The Times of India (14.1.2009 p.15) the Harvard endowment which was worth $36.9billion at the end of June 2008 is said to have come down by at lest 22% since then, and is expected to reduce further for the fiscal ending June. Yale univeristy’s endowment is said to have lost about a quarter of its value during the second half of 2008, from a high of $22.9 billion on June 30. Stanford university’s endowment which stood at $17billion in June –third only to Harvard’s and Yale’s – is also said to have reduced drastically.

Indian students have more reason to go abroad. The banks in India may not have strong reservation to lend loans for the abroad going students. One, there is strong push from the finance ministry to banks to provide education loans easily. Second, banks in the public sector are flooded with huge cash reserves. Three, there is no immediate threat to the employment opportunities for Indian students.

Saturday, December 27, 2008

Foreign students as security risk?


Students are watched carefully during security checks. All over the world, students are considered as potential security risks. Hence there is an all round watch over them. India has less than 30,000 students from foreign countries. USA has over 5.5 lakh students. Yet India is more worried about foreign students than USA. The reason is simple – security fear and lack of single window clearance for the students. Without analyzing the economic potential of the foreign students, the Government of India is having knee jerk reactions. The real culprits are left out but the innocent students are harassed. Despite the technological development over staying guests were checked adequately and deported.

The Times of India (26.12.2008, p.11) reports “Foreign students enrolled in different institutions of India – are under the police scanner. Their visa details are being scrutinized to find out whether some of them might have overstayed, posing a security risk.

The move has been initiated by the Foreigners Regional Registration Offices (FRROs) through respective state/U police forces across the country in the wake of the Centre’s direction to weed out overstaying foreign nationals through detailed checks post Mumbai terror attacks.

“Although it is an ongoing exercise in the case of al foreigners who visit India on valid documents, the idea is to sensitize educational institutions of the problem of overstaying students and its security implications for India”, said a senior home ministry official.

Incidentally, no Pakistani student was enrolled in the country as on December 31, 2007,. Though the ministry has not come out with any specific figure of overstaying foreign students, the enormity of the problem can be understood by the huge numbers of missing Bangladeshi and Pakistani nationals who have just disappeared while visiting India.

The figure shows that over 62,000 Bangladeshi nationals disappeared after expiry of their visa during 2005-07. The number of missing Bangladeshis (62,547) is in fact much higher than the number of Pakistanis (22,097) who had come to India using proper visas and subsequently vanished.

Top 10 States/UTs having foreign students (28,842)
Delhi 7,424
Maharastra 5,551
Tamil Nadu 4,956
Andra Pradesh 2,289
West Bengal 1,697
Uttar Pradesh 1,486
Kerala 1,050
Gujarat 721
Punjab 576
Himachal Pradesh 572

Top 10 – (Country-wise break-up)
US 2,645
Sri Lanka 1,642
Hungary 1,557
Bangladesh 1,411
Sudan 1,078
Thailand 1,038
UK 891
Kenya 816
Afghanistan 801
Malaysia 792

An efficient administrative setup is needed to capitalize the human resources of India. Foreign students should be given all the possible help and clearances should be given in a single window. Those who overstay and violate the visa procedures should be immediately deported. There should not be a mix of priorities. India is relaxed over both the issues which cost the economy and society very dearly.