Vice-Chancellor urges Prime Minister to retain Graduate Visa Route

22 May 2024

The University of Central Lancashire's Professor Graham Baldwin says losing international students would ultimately result in significant economic harm for the North

The University of Central Lancashire's Vice-Chancellor Professor Graham Baldwin is one of a group of Vice-Chancellors from universities in the North who have got together to write a letter to Prime Minister Rishi Sunak.

The letter (which can be read below) urges the Prime Minister to accept the conclusion of the Migration Advisory Committee which reviewed the Graduate Visa Route and recommended that this arrangement, by which international students can stay and work here for 2 years after graduation – is retained.  

Professor Baldwin signed the letter, both as Vice-Chancellor, and as the Chair of MillionPlus, the Association of Modern universities in the UK. 

The letter makes clear the value of international students, particularly to northern cities and towns where there is already structural economic inequality. 

Vice-Chancellor Professor Graham Baldwin said: “The University of Central Lancashire is part of a group of northern universities urging the Prime Minister to accept the findings of the Migration Advisory Committee (MAC) which has recommended that the current visa arrangement should be retained in its entirety.

“Our ability to attract ambitious and innovative students from around the world is a UK success story we should be celebrating.

"We have roughly 6,000 international students who contribute approximately £130 million in total to our university and the local economy."

Vice-Chancellor Professor Graham Baldwin

"International students add more than £60 billion to the UK’s economy. They start businesses and contribute billions of pounds in income tax, national insurance, and VAT annually.

“We have roughly 6,000 international students who contribute approximately £130 million in total to our university and the local economy. This money is vital to northern cities such as Preston and should be protected at all costs.

“I firmly believe that removing the graduate route visa would make the UK a less attractive destination for international students. Losing them would ultimately result in significant economic harm for the North.”

Letter from Vice-Chancellors of Northern Universities
to the Prime Minister