UNITED KINGDOM

UK: Universities step up overseas recruiting
Access to university should be based on ability to learn, not ability to pay, the UK Prime Minister David Cameron insisted earlier this month, writes Harriet Swain for the Guardian. Denying reports that the government would allow universities to recruit above their student number limit so long as the extra students paid higher fees, he was adamant: "There is no question of people being able to buy their way into university," he said.But universities are already allowed to recruit extra students who pay higher fees - if those students are foreign. With students carrying more of the burden of funding in future, as home and EU tuition fees rise to up to £9,000 (US$14,700), and with government support for humanities subjects being withdrawn, will foreign students become ever more valuable as cash cows?
The average overseas student fee for 2010-11 was £11,435 - more than £2,700 higher than the average home-EU fee expected to be charged from 2012. Unlike for home students, there is no cap - Oxford, Cambridge and Imperial College, London, all charged more than £18,000 for lab-based subjects last year - and no obligation to ensure fair access for different social groups. Institutions can recruit as many international students as they like and recruitment is positively encouraged by the government as foreign students contribute an estimated £8 billion in fees and other spending to the UK economy.
Full report on the Guardian site