fbpx
Market intelligence for international student recruitment from ICEF
20th Feb 2012

Author forecasts a tripling of international students worldwide by 2025

In a newly published book, Making a Difference: Australian International Education, contributor and industry consultant Bob Goddard provides a global view and a long-term forecast for the international education marketplace. Goddard projects the world's population of higher education students will more than double to 262 million by the year 2025. He expects that the bulk of this growth – more than half from China and India alone – will be in the developing world. Even more significantly for international recruiters, Goddard forecasts that developing nations will be unable to offer sufficient higher education spaces to keep pace with this demand. As a result, the world's population of international students will grow to eight million by 2025 – that is, nearly triple the number of students enrolled outside of their home countries today. Further, and as has been widely observed in recent months, the field of countries competing to recruit international students will also continue to expand (see "A more complex marketplace taking shape for 2012" for our synopsis). A University World News commentary on Making a Difference sums up the situation as follows.

The English-speaking countries have been long accustomed to dominating the market in selling international education to students but that situation is undergoing rapid change, Goddard notes. Traditional source countries such as Singapore, Malaysia, Thailand and the Middle East are developing their own capacities to offer education to outsiders. Singapore hopes to attract 150,000 foreign students by 2015, Malaysia 100,000 by 2020 and Jordan 100,000 by the same year. China, despite facing huge demand for higher education from its own young people, is planning to expand its enrolments of foreigners from 200,000 at present to 300,000 by 2020. Then there are developed countries such as Japan that have shown little interest in the past in marketing education overseas. With an ageing population and an increasingly under-utilised higher education sector, Goddard says there is a growing realisation among the Japanese that this could provide opportunities for 'substantial levels of international recruitment'.
Making a Difference

is available for order from the International Education Association of Australia. Source: Making a Difference: Australian International Education, Dorothy David and Bruce Mackintosh, ed., UNSW Press, 2012; University World News

Most Recent

  • ICEF Podcast: Live from NAFSA 2025 Read More
  • Irish ELT sector sounds note of “cautious stability” for 2024 Read More
  • US ELT numbers moving toward pre-pandemic norms 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

ICEF Podcast: Live from NAFSA 2025 Listen in as ICEF’s Craig Riggs and Martijn van de Veen recap a busy week at the annual...
Read more
Irish ELT sector sounds note of “cautious stability” for 2024 After a year of very strong growth in 2023, Ireland’s English Language Teaching (ELT) sector is reporting remarkably...
Read more
US ELT numbers moving toward pre-pandemic norms If you look at English Language Teaching (ELT) numbers in the United States year-over-year, it is easy to...
Read more
Sector and students shocked as US State Department says it will “aggressively revoke visas for Chinese students” On 28 May 2025, a late-afternoon statement from the US State Department came as the latest shock for...
Read more
International student interest in US falls to pandemic-era low After months of announcements, immigration enforcement actions, and confusion around US policies for international students – as well...
Read more
Trump administration orders a pause on new student visa interviews Journalists at Politico have obtained a US State Department cable sent to all US diplomatic posts on 27...
Read more
Trump administration bars Harvard from enrolling international students; judge promptly issues restraining order to prevent the move Updated for 23 May 2025: The US government has suspended Harvard University’s ability to enrol foreign students, effective...
Read more
Plans afoot to stimulate UK–EU student mobility under new terms The UK government has opened negotiations with the European Union to restart a youth mobility scheme to and...
Read more
What are you looking for?
Quick Links