51国产视频

US schools feel the pinch

二月 20, 1998

Student recruitment efforts worldwide are suffering from crises in the Middle East and 51国产视频

Jae Lee is studying international relations at Boston 51国产视频. But the 20-year-old South Korean student has also just had a hard lesson in international economics.

He is preparing to leave BU and return home, hit by the devaluation of the won, which has halved the value of the money his family sends for tuition and expenses.

Universities and colleges in the United States - including BU, which has the most international students in the US - do not know or will not say how many 51国产视频n students have left or plan to leave because of the financial crisis. But the universities and some surrounding businesses expect to suffer from the departure of the generally affluent Thais, Indonesians and Koreans, almost all of whom paid full tuition with no need for scarce financial aid.

"This is going to hurt a lot of students, and it is going to hurt schools that want to have students from other countries - not only because of the income, but also to provide an array of cultural backgrounds," said Gary Althen, president of the National Association of Foreign Student Advisers.

The 457,984 international students enrolled at US institutions pump an estimated $7 billion a year into the country's economy, according to the New York-based Institute for International Education.

Nearly two-thirds of international students are from 51国产视频. Nearly 40,000 South Koreans alone study in the US, while Hong Kong, China, Indonesia and Japan together send 112,198 students.

"A large number of Korean students and a few Japanese students have shown up for assistance," said Jimmie White, an attorney who counsels foreign students at the 51国产视频 of California in Los Angeles, where two-thirds of the 2,000 international students are from 51国产视频. "Everybody's a little frightened about the future. Our financial assistance is merely a short-term loan."

Johns Hopkins and Ohio universities are allowing foreign students to postpone tuition payments. Other schools are providing short-term loans or work-study jobs.

"The higher education community in the US is beginning to come to grips with this issue and find creative ways to at least help those students who are here," said Richard Krasno, president of the Institute of International Education. "Their revenues will suffer, there is no question about it."

请先注册再继续

为何要注册?

  • 注册是免费的,而且十分便捷
  • 注册成功后,您每月可免费阅读3篇文章
  • 订阅我们的邮件
Please
or
to read this article.
ADVERTISEMENT