fbpx
Market intelligence for international student recruitment from ICEF
6th Jun 2012

How will the Indian rupee’s slide affect your recruitment strategy?

“I am suffering for non-academic reasons. Had I done the course a year earlier, I would have paid some 20% less than now.”

— Natasha Kumar, Indian student worrying about her plans to study at Nanyang Technology University (NTU) in Singapore, quoted by the industry news site Overseas Overwhelmed

Kumar’s concerns are being felt by the hundreds of thousands of Indian students hoping to study in overseas institutions in the near future or already in courses. The reason? The rupee’s rapid and continuing slide against the US dollar; it depreciated by 6.51% in May alone and has fallen by more than 23% in the past year. Of course this is problematic for Indian students set on studying abroad. A choice to study in an overseas institution is always expensive, but a huge volume of Indian students have nevertheless paid in full in institutions around the world: in 2010–11, it’s estimated that 103,895 Indian students studied in the US, 27,000+ studied in Australia, and 12,000 studied in Canada. The rupee’s declining value will, at the very least, cause students to think long and hard about where they choose to study and to carefully evaluate the affordability of their study options. Amit Agnihotri, director of MBAUniverse.com, commented to Overseas Overwhelmed: “It may not affect the Ivy Leagues because of their pedigree but it will certainly hamper tier-II foreign colleges that get the bulk of the Indian students.” The reason for the rupee’s fall is linked to the Euro financial crisis, which has caused investors to sell the euro and buy more US dollars, leading to all major currencies’ depreciation against the dollar. The rupee was affected more than most other currencies due to problems in the Indian domestic economy: sluggish economic reforms and increasing current and fiscal deficits. "The rupee will be under pressure for the next six to nine months," predicts Manoj Vohra, director, Asia-Pacific, at Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU), to India’s Business Today.

Rupee’s fall creates opportunities as well as challenges

If some institutions and even country markets stand to lose from Indian students’ greater caution, others stand to gain. Price-sensitive Indian students may not abandon their plans to study overseas but may choose less costly options and/or courses where they have an opportunity to work. The other positive factor is Indian students’ unabated appetite for study abroad. As Anahita Sahni, who wants to study management in Singapore told The Times of India:

"Getting admission to good Indian colleges is becoming very difficult. Last year, Delhi University announced a 100% cut-off. With such high cut-off marks, it gets impossible to secure a seat. Like me, many of my friends are planning to study abroad."

The rupee will at some point stop its decline. In the meantime, how will your institution approach the situation? Will it adopt new pricing policies for Indian students, such as discounting, financial aid or staggered payment terms? How will it affect your strategies regarding recruiting students from India? Sources: Overseas Overwhelmed, Business Today, The Times of India, Toonari Post, Mint

Most Recent

  • Year in review: What we learned in 2024 Read More
  • New research on imminent enrolment challenges for US colleges Read More
  • Australia revives international enrolment caps via new ministerial directive 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

Year in review: What we learned in 2024 We return this week to something of an annual tradition here at ICEF Monitor: a quick recap of...
Read more
New research on imminent enrolment challenges for US colleges By 2041, experts expect that the number of domestic high-school graduates in the US will drop by 13%....
Read more
Australia revives international enrolment caps via new ministerial directive It was clear by the end of November that Australia’s controversial ESOS amendment bill – complete with its widely...
Read more
UK ELT reports “new normal” with softer student numbers for key third quarter The UK’s English-language teaching sector (ELT) may have reached peak business volume in 2019, five years ago. This...
Read more
Continued growth reported for UK transnational education enrolments Almost as many international students are studying for a UK degree outside of the UK as in it....
Read more
What do international students want? The following article is adapted from the 2025 edition of ICEF Insights magazine, which is freely available to...
Read more
First-year college students in the US down by more than 6% ahead of projected “enrolment cliff” A new data analysis reveals worrisome trends for US colleges with respect to domestic first-year enrolments. The number...
Read more
Japan market report: A dual focus on attracting international students and sending more Japanese students abroad This year has witnessed a trend in some Western economies towards deglobalisation. Pressured by a conviction among large...
Read more
What are you looking for?
Quick Links