fbpx
Market intelligence for international student recruitment from ICEF
17th Jul 2019

UK survey maps career outcomes of foreign graduates

A newly released survey provides a unique snapshot of the employment outcomes for foreign alumni of British universities. International Graduate Outcomes 2019 was commissioned by Universities UK International (UUKi) and produced by iGraduate. It gathers survey responses from more than 16,000 international graduates from 58 British institutions.

“The survey results show that international graduates from UK universities go on to successful and satisfying careers, and that the majority of them recognise that their UK degree is a vehicle for their success,” highlights the report. “The results also show just how valuable our international graduates are as ambassadors for the UK.”

The survey findings reveal a high level of student satisfaction, with 90% of graduates reporting that they are satisfied with their learning experience and the support they received from their universities in the UK. Meanwhile, 82% say they are satisfied or very satisfied with their careers so far.

In other headline findings:

  • 82% of international graduates say that their UK degree was worth the financial investment;
  • Nearly the same proportion (83%) felt that their UK degree helped them to get a job;
  • More than half (53%) said that they earn “above average or well above average” compared to peers that earned degrees in their home country;
  • Roughly eight in ten (77%) said that they are now more likely to do business with the UK – slightly more (81%) expected to build professional links with UK partners and nine in ten said they would return to the UK for holiday travel.

They survey findings have been published even as the UK is working toward a new international strategy that aims to increase the country’s foreign enrolment to 600,000 students by 2030. To get there, it will have to make substantial gains over the current base of roughly 460,000 foreign students in British higher education, and it will have to shake off several years of very marginal growth in foreign student numbers.

The relatively flat growth in foreign enrolment over the last five years can be traced back to more restrictive post-study work policies introduced by the British government in the early part of this decade. The new international strategy, many observers feel, hinges on a proposal to expand work rights for international graduates. Even if successful, however, the proposed UK offer will still lag considerably behind that of other major study destinations.

Speaking to Times Higher Education, UUKi Director Vivienne Stern argues that the new alumni survey is an important additional piece of evidence for the government’s policy deliberations.

“I would point to [foreign graduates’] desire to maintain professional and business links, their desire to maintain research links and to come for tourism [after graduation]. We benefit, they benefit, the country benefits. It’s a kind of win, win, win…“If [the work rights amendment] isn’t accepted when the immigration bill returns to Parliament, I will eat my hat.”

For additional background, please see:

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

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
ICEF Podcast: How new technologies impact international student employability Listen in as ICEF’s Craig Riggs and Martijn van de Veen recap some recent industry developments with a...
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
Provision of online English-taught degree programmes has more than doubled since 2019 Students looking for English-taught online degree programmes now have more options than ever. A new report from British...
Read more
What are you looking for?
Quick Links