Education : Higher Studies 

FLOCKING TO NZ

As many 6000 Indian students enrolled for ­studies in New Zealand last year, a huge leap from the ­figure of 150 in 1998, with Punjab being the biggest ­market for New Zealand institutes. The new mantra seems to be ‘Go South’
Indian students continue flocking to New Zealand for higher education and the number has increased by 300 percent in the last six years, says a diplomat from that country. “India is a big market of talented students for us. Their number has considerably increased. I do not think recession can stop Indian students from coming to New Zealand,” says Cliff Fuller, New Zealand’s trade commissioner in India.

According to Fuller, the percentage of Indian students enrolling in New Zealand institutes has increased nearly 300 percent in the last six years. “In 1998, only 150 Indian students enrolled. This figure rose to 1,500 in 2002. In 2008, we registered 6,000 new enrolments from India,” Fuller said.
He said it was difficult to give the exact number of Indian students in New Zealand. “We have the number of newly-enrolled students. It is very difficult to tell the exact number of Indian students studying there.”

Fuller said Punjab was the biggest market for New Zealand institutes. Education contributed substantially in the New Zealand economy as it figured among the top five contributors to the country’s GDP. He added bilateral trade between India and New Zealand was nearly $500 million per year now. “There is a vast potential to increase business in the fields of IT, software, industrial exports and the CNG industry.”

Fuller was in Chandigarh to participate in the education fair organised by New Zealand Trade and Enterprise (NZTE) and Education New Zealand, a government-funded organisation. Around 25 New Zealand institutes participated in the fair, held separately in New Delhi and Chandigarh.

“The best part of our education is that we also grant a one-year search visa, which is generally not available in case of other countries. After getting a job, one can also apply for two-year work permit,” says Chris Bond, a representative of a management institute in Wellington.

May 2009


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