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UK wary of bid to regain home fee status for European students

European Commission scheme would improve mobility between EU and UK for young people

Published on
April 19, 2024
Last updated
April 19, 2024
December 2, 2016: Passport control signage on the floor at Gatwick Airport directs passengers to 'non EU', 'UK' and 'EU' passport control points.
Source: iStock/Christopher Ames

The European Commission has proposed a post-Brexit mobility scheme with the UK that could make it easier for young people to study abroad, but the Westminster government has signalled that it is reluctant to play ball.

In a聽, the commission advises opening negotiations with the UK on an 鈥渁greement to facilitate youth mobility鈥, which would restore some of the exchange lost after Brexit. The envisaged agreement would apply to UK and聽European Union聽citizens aged between 18 and 30, allowing them to stay in the countries of their choice for up to four years. Mobility would not be 鈥減urpose-bound鈥, meaning a young聽person need not study or work in their destination country, for instance, in order to stay.

The commission stipulates that young people should receive 鈥渆qual treatment鈥 regarding tuition fees, noting that EU citizens currently studying in the UK are subject to 鈥渧ery high鈥 international student fees. Should the proposal become reality, EU citizens would pay the equivalent of domestic tuition fees, which are capped at 拢9,250 a year in England for undergraduate degrees.

At present, EU students and doctoral researchers have 鈥渕ore difficult access or no access鈥 to benefits such as student loans or scholarships, the commission says. 鈥淭he result is a decline in the number of union students in the United Kingdom.鈥

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In the council recommendation, the commission says the proposal came in the wake of the UK鈥檚 efforts to establish individual mobility deals with 鈥渟everal (but not all) member states鈥 in 2023. 鈥淭his approach would result in differential treatment of union nationals,鈥 the commission says.

鈥淭he United Kingdom鈥檚 withdrawal from the European Union has hit young people in the EU and the UK who would like to study, work and live abroad particularly hard,鈥 said Maro拧 艩ef膷ovi膷, the commission鈥檚 executive vice-president for the European Green Deal, inter-institutional relations and foresight.

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鈥淭oday, we take the first step towards an ambitious but realistic agreement between the EU and the UK that would fix this issue. Our aim is to rebuild human bridges between young Europeans on both sides of the Channel.鈥

Speaking to the BBC, the Home Office indicated a preference for individual youth mobility schemes, calling existing programmes 鈥渟uccessful鈥 and adding that it remained 鈥渙pen to agreeing them with our international partners, including EU member states鈥.

A Labour Party spokesperson told the broadcaster that it had 鈥渘o plans for a youth mobility scheme鈥 but aimed to improve EU-UK relations in other ways.

emily.dixon@timeshighereducation.com

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