An expectation that the Graduate Route will be more closely linked to access to a professional role within the employment market is circulating within the industry, as speculation over the contents of the highly anticipated immigration white paper reach fever pitch ahead of its expected publication next week.
UK media reports this week have suggested that international students will be forced to get a graduate-level job in order to stay in the country after graduation as Keir Starmer’s government scrambles to reduce net migration levels.
According to an article in The Times, “Government sources said the bar would not be set that high but suggested they would target careers in which salaries do not typically rise beyond a certain level after several years.”
So while at present any job is open to international graduates, those with no hopes of promotion, ie pot washing, would no longer be eligible.
This would tie into the Labour government’s aim of linking migration policies to skill and labour market needs, with the Migration Advisory Committee (MAC) set to investigate the over-reliance of certain sectors such as IT and engineering on international workers.
The Graduate Route allows international students who have completed a degree in the UK to stay and work for up to two years after graduation, or three years for PhD graduates.
Currently, students on this route can retain their visa even in low-skilled jobs or while they are looking for work, but remaining in the UK beyond this point requires meeting a minimum salary threshold for a skilled worker visa.
Despite concerns that the last Conservative government would scrap the Graduate Route altogether, international education stakeholders in the UK were left jubilant after a MAC probe last year recommended that it be left in tact – advice that the then-government chose to heed.
The immigration white paper will detail Labour’s strategy to reduce net migration levels in the UK. This number was at an estimated 728,000 in the year ending June 2024, marking a decline from 906,000 the previous year, partly due to an almost outright ban on international students’ ability to bring dependants with them.
Meanwhile, Labour’s rumoured visa crackdown on countries with high numbers of asylum claims has raised eyebrows among international education stakeholders.
It is rumoured that nationals from countries with high rates of asylum claims will find it harder to secure a work or study visa, with people from Pakistan, Nigeria and Sri Lanka expected to be hit the hardest.
The immediate priority is to avoid generalisations that risk mischaracterising a highly motivated, academically driven student population
Akif Khan and Tariq Malik
Speaking to The PIE News, international higher education experts Akif Khan and Tariq Malik said that there were “rising concerns” about potential UK visa restrictions being linked to asylum trends, as well as additional scrutiny over any changes to the Graduate Route and the upcoming white paper.
“These policy discussions carry serious implications for international student recruitment and long-term confidence in the UK as a destination. For Pakistani students and families making high-stakes decisions, clarity, consistency, and opportunity remain critical,” they said.
And they warned that it was important to give context to the asylum data used to underpin recent media stories, given that asylum numbers are not limited to intenrational students – with many spanning visa categories that are unrelated to higher education.”
Indeed, Home Office figures released in March show that just 16,000 people of the 108,000 who claimed asylum in the UK in 2024 held a student visa – representing under 15% of claimants.
“To draw meaningful conclusions, a detailed breakdown by visa type is essential,” noted Khan and Malik. “Since the data release, we’ve begun compiling and analysing our own insights, and several important contextual factors have emerged. While that’s a broader discussion for another time, the immediate priority is to avoid generalisations that risk mischaracterising a highly motivated, academically driven student population.”
Last year, all eyes turned to Australia after the country reported a surge in protection visa claims following the government’s prolonged crackdown on international education and visa restrictions.
According to an investigation by the Sydney Morning Herald, some 357 students applied for asylum in May 2024, growing steadily from 239 claims in April and 315 in March.
Former Department of Education deputy secretary Abul Rizvi was quoted as saying that new restrictions clamping down on so-called ‘visa-hopping’ had narrowed international students’ options to stay in the country, meaning that asylum claims were likely to continue to grow.
The post Speculation rife that UK’s Graduate Route may be tied to professional roles only appeared first on The PIE News.