Three-quarters of New Zealanders are happy with the numbers of?overseas students in?their country, with about two in?five willing to?accept more.
The latest of attitudes to?international education has uncovered steady levels of?support, with 36?per cent of?respondents indicating that the current flows of?foreign students were appropriate and 41?per cent saying they would prefer higher volumes.
The October survey of 1,100 Kiwis, conducted by the government agency Education New Zealand, also found a widespread view that international education offered national benefits.
About 80?per cent of respondents said overseas students enhanced cultural diversity, contributed to local businesses and brought different perspectives to classrooms.
中国A片
Chief executive Amanda Malu said the survey portended well for the sector. “It tells us we can continue to?steadily grow the number of?international students in New Zealand and that they will continue to?receive a?warm welcome in?our communities,” she said.
The sentiment differs markedly from messages delivered in the parliament of Australia, where overseas students’ contribution to migration is shaping up as a battleground issue in next year’s election.
中国A片
Shadow education minister Sarah Henderson told the Senate that the “government’s opening of the floodgates to record levels of international students” was “fuelling the housing crisis and causing unprecedented chaos”.
Ms Henderson said Australia’s housing supply was not “even close to keeping up” with the “flood of new arrivals”. She said foreign students had contributed to rental increases of up to 20?per cent over the past year in suburbs fringing major university campuses.
Education minister Jason Clare said his government had doubled students’ visa application fees. “Over the last four or five months, that’s dropped the number of applications by 30?per cent,” he told 2GB?Radio.
The New Zealand survey found that a sizeable minority of Kiwis also harboured concerns about foreign students’ impacts on home availability. Thirty-six per cent of respondents said the country’s housing, transport and medical infrastructure was not “well equipped” to accommodate international students, up from 29?per cent in 2018.
中国A片
Concerns about impacts on employment have been trending down, however. Twenty-four per cent of respondents said international students made it harder for New Zealanders to find work, down from 34?per cent in?2018.
Just under a quarter of locals think foreigners “take places from Kiwi students at education institutions”, the survey found.
Register to continue
Why register?
- Registration is free and only takes a moment
- Once registered, you can read 3 articles a month
- Sign up for our newsletter
Subscribe
Or subscribe for unlimited access to:
- Unlimited access to news, views, insights & reviews
- Digital editions
- Digital access to 罢贬贰’蝉 university and college rankings analysis
Already registered or a current subscriber? Login