ºÚÁϹÙÍø

Market intelligence for international student recruitment from ºÚÁϹÙÍø

ºÚÁϹÙÍø

4th Dec 2019

Closer to home: Intra-regional mobility in Asia

The following feature article is adapted from the 2019 edition of ºÚÁϹÙÍø Insights magazine. The complete issue is available to .

For the past decade, the outflow of students from Asian countries to Western ones has been nothing short of staggering. Hundreds of thousands of students from Japan, Indonesia, South Korea, Pakistan, Taiwan, Vietnam, and especially India and China travel overseas every year for degrees, contributing billions of dollars to host economies.

Western destinations have been popular because they offer so many highly ranked, high-quality universities. Asian students have traditionally chosen these schools because of the prestige attached to their degrees, a prestige that often translates into better earning potential for graduates.

But the idea that a Western degree is automatically better and more advantageous than one obtained in Asia is losing ground. Asian students now have an array of appealing options within their region for study. There are a number of reasons for this:

  • A dozen of the world’s 100 top ranked universities are now in Asia – in China, Hong Kong, Japan, Singapore, and South Korea.
  • Asia is the world’s fastest-growing regional economy; China, India, Indonesia, Japan, and South Korea are driving the most expansion. Students realise that Asian universities can help them to access industry internships and jobs in the region.
  • China, the continent’s powerhouse, invests heavily in its massive, multifaceted soft-power initiative known as One Belt, One Road, which stretches through more than a hundred countries and through South and East Asia. China is creating thousands of scholarships to attract Asian as well as African students. It is increasing higher education capacity and tempting Asian students from within the region to choose China rather than go overseas.
  • Students everywhere are gravitating towards programmes with strong and immediate employment outcomes. Asian universities are performing very well in this regard. QS’s 2019 Graduate Employability Rankings include four Asian universities – Tsinghua, Peking, Hong Kong and Tokyo – among the top 20 institutions. QS notes that “Asian universities are among the world’s best at enhancing their alumni’s job market prospects.” All told, 163 of the 500 universities in the rankings are in Asia – including 26 in China, 16 in Korea, 14 in Japan, and 13 in India.
  • More than half a dozen Asian countries have national strategies aimed at making them major destinations, with several setting international student targets. China is now the world’s fourth most popular study destination after the US, Australia, and Canada.
  • Many Asian institutions offer lower tuition fees than those in the West, and China in particular is drawing students through scholarships.
  • Asian universities provide the benefit of being closer to home for students from the region who worry about homesickness and culture shock.
In 2019, the Times Higher Education University Rankings placed 
Beijing’s Tsinghua University 1st in Asia and 22nd in the world.
In 2019, the Times Higher Education University Rankings placed Beijing’s Tsinghua University 1st in Asia and 22nd in the world.

Measuring risk

The top English-speaking destinations – the US, the UK, Australia, and Canada – have historically relied on Asian countries for students. For example,

  • China, India, and South Korea are the top sending markets for the US, with Vietnam, Taiwan, and Japan in sixth, seventh, and eighth place, respectively. China, India, and South Korea make up 71% of all international students in the US. When Vietnam, Taiwan, and Japan are added, the six Asian source countries contribute 80% of the total.
  • India, China, and South Korea are also the top sending markets for Canada. Together the three countries composed almost 60% of international students in Canada in 2018.
  • Eight of Australia’s top 10 sending markets are Asian: China, India, Nepal, Malaysia, South Korea, Vietnam, Thailand, and Indonesia. The first three make up 48% of all enrolments, while students from the eight countries together represent 64% of Australia’s international student population.
  • A 33% increase in the number of Chinese students in the UK is the main reason that the number of non-EU students grew by 9% in the UK in 2018. China now accounts for one in five international students in the UK, and one in three non-EU students. India, Malaysia, and Hong Kong are also among the UK’s top 10 non-EU sending markets.

Altogether, there are more than a million Asian students studying in the US, Canada, Australia, and the UK.

If China, South Korea, Taiwan, Japan, and Malaysia reach their international student targets by 2025, they will enrol close to 1.5 million students – the bulk of them from neighbouring countries.

Competition increasing

In addition to the many Asian institutions scoring highly on world university rankings, still more Asian schools are competing on price, a strong position given that affordability remains an issue for many Asian families.

The following table provides a high-level summary of the relative competitive position of established and emerging study destinations within Asia.

More than ever, universities in Western destinations must provide a compelling offer to students in Asian markets (e.g., through reputation, student testimonials, internships, destination marketing, scholarships, or discounting) and ensure that once students are enrolled, they keep those promises and provide excellent student supports and graduate outcomes.

In addition, coordinated national strategies aimed at attracting international students are crucial. Well-designed visa, work, and immigration policies can make a huge difference and are the major reason that Australia and Canada continue to increase their market share, in contrast to the UK and the US.

Finally, choosing new markets to invest in is an absolute necessity to reduce the risk of exposure created by the heavy concentrations of Asian students in leading destinations.

For additional background, please see:

Most Recent

  • New research finds global youth increasingly drawn to non-Western governance models and study destinations Read More
  • UK: 7 in 10 universities report declining international postgraduate enrolments; visa rejections are part of the story Read More
  • Five things we learned from this year’s International Student Barometer Read More

Most Popular

  • Which countries will contribute the most to global student mobility in 2030? Read More
  • Research shows link between study abroad and poverty alleviation  Read More
  • Beyond the Big Four: How demand for study abroad is shifting to destinations in Asia and Europe Read More

Because you found this article interesting

New research finds global youth increasingly drawn to non-Western governance models and study destinations Two important new global studies – the 2025 iterations of the British Council’s Global Perceptions survey and QS’s...
Read more
UK: 7 in 10 universities report declining international postgraduate enrolments; visa rejections are part of the story Of universities in the UK surveyed recently by the British Universities International Liaison Association (BUILA), 7 in 10...
Read more
Five things we learned from this year’s International Student Barometer Etio’s International Student Barometer (ISB) is the world’s largest international student experience survey of enrolled students. The most...
Read more
Australia: Multiple data indicators signal further declines ahead for international student numbers A new analysis of student visa trends suggests that the next couple of years – at least –...
Read more
A common challenge: Strengthening student confidence in the ROI of study abroad More restrictive immigration policies in the Big Four destinations – Australia, Canada, UK, and the United States –...
Read more
New international student permit approvals for Canada fell below COVID levels in 2025 Canada approved only 75,372 new study permits in 2025. This represents a -64% drop year-over-year, and an -18%...
Read more
UK Home Office publishes updated visa sponsor guidance for “agents and third parties” The UK government has expanded its regulatory oversight for British institutions’ engagement with education agents. The existing structure...
Read more
Visa rejections climb in the US for international students from key markets including India A new report from Shorelight called Beyond the Interview: A Decade of Student Visa Denials
and What Comes Next,...
Read more
What are you looking for?
Quick Links