Japan’s employment outlook helping to drive foreign enrolment growth
For some time now, Japan has held to an ambitious goal to host 300,000 foreign students by 2020. It looked for a number of years, however, like that target would remain out of reach. But the country’s foreign enrolment growth has begun to gain more momentum over the last two years and, it now appears, could be on pace to reach that 300,000-student plateau by the end of the decade.
Year-over-year growth took a big step in 2014, with total student numbers up nearly 10% over the year before. And the latest figures from the Japan Student Services Organization (JASSO) show even greater growth in 2015, with a 13.2% increase compared to 2014. Japan hosted nearly 210,000 students in 2015 and if that growth continues at roughly the same rate through 2020, the 300,000-student target will certainly be within reach.
Playing the employment card
Japan’s recent progress in growing its international enrolment is bound to get a boost from new measures to boost employment outcomes for foreign graduates. “Japan is hiring foreign talent and it is now a top priority that international students attending Japanese universities stay on in the country, with the government offering new incentives such as subsidised company internships, help with finding jobs on graduation, stepped-up Japanese language courses and more streamlined processes for work visas after graduation,” notes a report from University World News.
Many of these new supports arise from the latest iteration of the Japan Revitalization Strategy, which was announced in June 2016. One of its goals: to raise the employment rate of foreign graduates from the current 30% to 50% by 2020.
That ambition lines up well with the post-graduation plans of many foreign students. A 2014 JASSO survey of nearly 12,000 foreign students found that more than a third intended to stay in Japan after their studies to find work.

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