UK Parliament / Open data

Student Visas

Proceeding contribution from Damian Hinds (Conservative) in the House of Commons on Thursday, 6 June 2013. It occurred during Backbench debate on Student Visas.

The hon. Lady brilliantly anticipates my next point. Of course, she is absolutely correct. As my hon. Friend the Member for Croydon Central (Gavin Barwell) said, we are, to coin a phrase, in a global race,

and we are not the only ones who have spotted that this is an attractive sector and who are doing things differently, as we will continue do in order to protect and growth our own share. The most obvious competitive set are the Anglophone countries, led by the United States, but also including Canada and Australia. Increasingly, however, non-English speaking countries are offering English-speaking courses. The third competitor is potentially the biggest, and that is the choice of staying at home. In China, India, Nigeria and elsewhere in the world, there is a big business opportunity in attracting students from those countries to stay in institutions there. So, yes, we have to redouble our efforts all the time in order not only to forge ahead, but just to hold our own.

We should be talking always about quality higher education, pre-higher education preparation and certified colleges. These institutions should not be selling visas; they must be selling education, and we know that there have been recent substantial abuses. The National Audit Office says that in 2009 up to 50,000 alleged students were here primarily to work, rather than study. We had this cadre of serial students who were forever renewing their visas without showing any substantial progress in their studies. Clearly, if we are serious about curbing immigration in what has become a chaotic situation and about reducing the numbers and getting rid of abuse, we have to tackle the student visa route.

Type
Proceeding contribution
Reference
563 cc1726-7 
Session
2013-14
Chamber / Committee
House of Commons chamber
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