UK universities flock to India - but will they succeed?
UK universities flock to India - but will they succeed? 6 hours ago
"We're looking at an intake of around 270 students in the first year.
and that should go up to 3,000-4,000 students each year over the coming years," Lindsay Oades, provost of the University of York in Mumbai, told the BBC.
Others include the University of Aberdeen, University of Bristol, University of Liverpool, Queen's University Belfast and Coventry University. The University of Southampton has already opened a campus in the capital Delhi and along with York, focuses primarily on business, management and engineering programmes.
Ostensibly, the proposition appears like a win-win for UK universities facing severe fiscal pressures at home, as well as for Indian students starved of quality education locally. However, expanding on the ground will be easier said than done. According to UK government's figures, India has 40 million university students and would need at least 70 million places in the decade to 2035, opening up an incremental market opportunity of 25-30 million seats for British universities. Moreover there's a clear supply gap in high-quality education.
"Eleven million students complete Grade 12 [final school year in India] each year, with roughly 1.
7 million falling within the top academic bracket. India's top-tier institutions admit only about 200,000 of them annually," Aritra Ghosal of OneStep Global, which helps foreign universities enter the Indian market, told the BBC.
According to Oades, fees at York's Indian campus will be priced at around 50% of what it would cost to study at the university's campus in the UK. While still much more expensive than many Indian private universities, there is a straight-up "quality justification" for the premium, he says, adding that universities like York follow global standards and focus on the demand for employability skills and industry partnerships.
But will this be enough? For decades millions of Indian students have opted to study abroad, taking loans and using up family savings, mainly to migrate for better work opportunities.
They may choose to come back in a few years, but not without working there at least for a while," says Kejriwal.
An India-delivered UK degree will not be a substitute for these students.
The success of these domestic campuses will hinge on numerous factors.
Initially, enrolment is expected to be in the low hundreds.
Expectedly, most UK universities, including York, have partnered with local education companies to manage regulatory complexities, establish and operate the campuses and enrol students. But more immediate issues like infrastructure availability could still come in the way for others trying to get in.
Nearly 30,000 acres of new campus land and approximately 2.
7 billion sq ft of academic infrastructure will have to be developed to meet surging demand from students for new universities, according to real estate consultancy Anarock. Follow BBC News India on Instagram, YouTube,X and Facebook
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