HEPI and Kaplan International Pathways are publishing data commissioned from London Economics showing – for the first time ever – the value of international students to the UK according to the new parliamentary constituency boundaries.
- For each of the top three performing constituencies – Leeds Central & Headingley, Sheffield Central and Newcastle upon Tyne Central & West – just one year’s intake of international students is worth half a billion pounds in economic benefits.
- The benefits of international students to the UK for the top 20 constituencies combined – 17 from England, one from Scotland, one from Wales and one from Northern Ireland – total £8.3 billion. The benefits for the bottom 20 constituencies total just £88 million.
- The top 10 constituencies include Holborn & St Pancras, which the Labour Leader Sir Keir Starmer is fighting to retain and where the benefits are worth £438 million, while the bottom 20 constituencies include Clacton, which the Reform UK Leader Nigel Farage is fighting to win and where the benefits are worth just £5 million.
- Richmond and Northallerton, which Conservative Leader Rishi Sunak is fighting to retain, comes quite low down the list at number 567, with the benefits amounting to £8 million; Kingston & Surbiton, which Liberal Democrat Leader Ed Davey is fighting to retain, is at number 91, with benefits totalling £146 million.
- The total gross benefits across the whole UK of one year’s intake of international students amount to £41.9 billion. The total net benefits after taking account of the impact on public services are £37.4 billion. (While the data for the new constituencies have not been published before, these totals were first published last year.)
- The new data are being sent to candidates so that they can see the importance of international students to the constituencies they are battling to represent in the House of Commons.
Data for all 650 new constituencies can be downloaded here:
Nick Hillman, Director of HEPI, said:
‘Surprisingly little information about our country is available at a constituency level. This limits the quality of political debate because a general election is actually 650 smaller battles – one in every constituency.
‘So HEPI and Kaplan International Pathways have teamed up with London Economics to publish new data on the value of international students to the UK at a local level. The data are more up-to-date, more accurate and more useful than any published before. They help to explain the position individual politicians and their parties take towards international students.
‘The new numbers are astounding. In a small handful of individual constituencies, each year’s new group of international students brings in over half a billion pounds a year. At the other end of the scale, there are around 100 constituencies where international students are worth less than £10 million.
‘We will now share the results with election candidates from all the political parties up and down the UK so that they can see the benefits and opportunities for their areas.’
Linda Cowan, Managing Director at Kaplan International Pathways, said:
‘Using updated and more granular census data than previously available and applying it to the new Westminster parliamentary constituencies, this important analysis provides the most accurate picture yet of the net economic impact of international students.
‘Regional inequality is one of the key policy areas for this election and this research reinforces the significant economic benefits that international students bring to communities right across the UK, as well as the many other benefits international students bring to our university communities.
‘With growing competition for international students from countries with world leading institutions, it has never been more important to send a consistent and unambiguous message of welcome to international students.’
James Cannings, Senior Economic Consultant at London Economics, said:
‘The availability of new and improved data on where international students live has allowed us to arrive at more robust estimates of the net economic benefit associated with international students in each parliamentary constituency.
‘We hope that the incoming Government, and every newly elected MP in every constituency, will pay close attention to these findings – both for the sake of the financial sustainability of the higher education sector, but also for the growth of the UK economy as a whole.’
While constituency-level information on international students has been published in the past, these earlier numbers had a number of limitations – for example, due to the limited data available at the time, they used the location of all students as a proxy for where international students live. The new data being published now are based instead on the number of non-UK born full-time students aged 18+ in England, Wales, and Northern Ireland in each area, as recorded in the 2021 Census, and they reflect the revised constituency boundaries. (For further information, see the methodological note at the end.)
The changes mean we have a clearer picture than in the past of which constituencies bring in the most economic benefits from international students and also which are less affected by students from abroad.
Data for every parliamentary constituency is being made available on a gross basis as well as a net basis, after the removal of the limited costs associated with hosting international students.