Surge in students from China will drive 40% rise in demand for university places
Scramble for university places looms as surge in students from China is predicted to drive a 40% rise in demand for university places over next four years
- UCAS Chief Executive Clare Marchant spoke during Higher Education seminar
- She argued that internationally there is a ‘real appetite for UK Higher Education’
- UCAS warned there will be a 40 per cent increase in demand in coming years
Students will face unprecedented competition to get a place at university over the next four years as a surge in applicants from China will drive a 40 per cent rise in demand.
UCAS Chief Executive Clare Marchant spoke during a seminar hosted by the Higher Education Policy Institute ahead of A-level results being published on August 10.
She argued that internationally there is a ‘real appetite for UK Higher Education’ including from China, India, Nigeria and Ghana.
The surge in the number of students from China is expected to far outstrip those from the whole of the EU by 2025, according to The Times.
There were 28,490 young people from China applying to UK universities this year alone, the publication said.
Ms Merchant, attending the webinar on July 30, said: ‘Internationally we are still seeing demand holding up – up 14 per cent from last year – so year-on-year increasing.’
She added that the EU had been an exception.
Ms Merchant continued: ‘I think as well as the China and India dominance in terms of internationals coming through we are also seeing diversification in terms of new nations with real appetite for UK Higher Education (as of figures from June 30).
‘So [applications] from the likes of Nigeria were up 66 per cent and Ghana up nearly a third – with applicants from India also up a third.
‘By the time my 13-year-old son gets to age 18, it will be much, much, more competitive. We think there will be one million applicants by 2025, up from 700,000 now,’ Ms Merchant said.
UCAS Chief Executive Clare Marchant, attending the webinar on July 30, said that international application numbers were up from last year but added that the EU had been an exception
She argued that internationally there is a ‘real appetite for UK Higher Education’ including from China, India, Nigeria and Ghana
Official UCAS statistics showed that as of June 30 – which is the final date to apply to up to five courses simultaneously – a total of 682,010 applicants (up 4 per cent on 2020) made 2,955,990 applications (up 6 per cent), resulting in 1,998,690 offers (up 3 per cent) made by universities and colleges.
One of the biggest increases in applications was seen for medical and dentistry degrees.
Last year, 105,200 students applied for the course but this has jumped nearly 20 per cent in 2021 to 124,510 applications.
Ms Marchant said that she was hopeful there would not be a ‘tsunami of appeals’ over A-level grades to secure places following the disrupted academic year amid the coronavirus pandemic.