探花视频

Still too easy to slip on the welcome mat

Published on
November 7, 2013
Last updated
May 22, 2015

Various articles in last week鈥檚 探花视频 (including 鈥Bad Indian signs, but applications hold up despite crackdown鈥, News, 31 October) covered UK international recruitment and the degree to which it is being affected by visa changes and the associated rhetoric. In your sample, there appear to be signs that demand may be strengthening once聽again (except in India, alas). There are a聽number of reasons for caution, however.

First, these are applications, not enrolments, and we all hope that the applicants recorded did opt to study here and safely received their visas, arrived and registered.

Second, many of them will have been attracted by the promise that some may stay on to work (in Tier 2) if they can secure one of聽the much quoted and attractive-sounding 鈥済raduate jobs鈥 with 鈥渟alaries of at least 拢20,300鈥. All this sounds very reasonable. Sadly, the devil is in the detail.

The UK Council for International Student Affairs recently fielded the case of an overseas postgraduate being offered a job as business development executive for a leading City law聽firm on a salary of 拢34,000. So far, so good.

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When the firm realised she needed to be sponsored under its Tier 2 licence, however, it withdrew the offer, saying at first (mistakenly) that she was subject to a resident labour market test. When it accepted its error (she was transferring in-country and was therefore exempt), the firm argued that despite offering the highly qualified individual a salary far exceeding the Tier 2 income requirement, the role did not meet the Home Office鈥檚 minimum skills threshold (National Qualifications Framework level 6).

After four years in the UK and so much investment, she is packing her bags and going home.

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If leading law firms find the rules difficult to follow, how will every landlord in the UK cope when they are required (if the immigration bill is approved) to check the immigration status of every student tenant? And what will be the impact of the other measure in the bill that will particularly affect overseas students: namely the requirement to pay a health services 鈥渟urcharge鈥, which for a married PhD聽student could mean an extra 拢1,000 on聽top of their standard visa fee?

We would be the first to welcome signs that the UK is regaining its 鈥渨elcoming鈥 reputation, that visa rules are becoming better understood and that numbers are increasing once more. But if we are to attract and retain overseas talent, post-study work rules must be simplified and properly thought through, given the damage that could be caused by the measures currently going through Parliament.

Dominic Scott
Chief executive
UK Council for International Student Affairs

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