Released on December 23, 2025, NITI Aayog’s comprehensive report, ‘Internationalisation of Higher Education in India’, paints a stark picture of India’s role as the world’s top sender of international students—over 13.35 lakh in 2024 alone. Amid a demographic bulge of 15.5 crore youth aged 18-23, the document, spearheaded by Vice Chairman Suman Bery and Member (Health & Education) V.K. Paul, analyzes outbound trends, economic strains, and actionable reforms. Collaborating with an IIT Madras-led consortium, it aligns with NEP 2020 and Viksit Bharat@2047, urging a shift from net exporter of talent to a global education hub. This analysis unpacks the data, highlighting opportunities to reverse the 28:1 outbound-to-inbound ratio through scholarships, offshore campuses, and research funds.
Background: India’s Mobility Paradox in Higher Education
India’s higher education sector, enrolling 4.3 crore students domestically, faces a mobility mismatch: while global student numbers have surged 214% in 25 years, India’s outbound dominates, signaling quality gaps and aspirational pulls abroad. The report, drawing from UNESCO, RBI, and ministry data (2016-2024), flags this as both a forex drain and brain drain risk—36% of top JEE scorers emigrate. Yet, it envisions inbound growth to 7.89 lakh by 2047 via internationalization at home, positioning India as a soft power player.
- Report Scope: Covers strategy, regulation, finance, branding, and curriculum; includes 76 action pathways and 125 success indicators.
- Global Context: India overtook China as the US’s largest student source in 2023-24; STEM fields drive 45% of outflows.
Key Statistics: Outbound Surge and Inbound Lag
Outbound mobility hit a record 13.35 lakh in 2024, up 95% since 2016 (CAGR 8.84%), with remittances ballooning >2,000% to Rs 29,000 crore under RBI’s LRS. Inbound? Just 46,878 in 2022, yielding a 1:28 ratio—exacerbating talent loss.
| Year | Outbound Students | YoY Change | Inbound Students | Ratio (Inbound:Outbound) | Net Outflow |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2016 | 6,84,823 | – | 45,424 | 1:15 | 6,39,399 |
| 2017 | 8,06,326 | +17.74% | ~47,000 | 1:17 | 7,58,751 |
| 2018 | 6,20,156 | -23.08% | ~48,000 | 1:13 | 5,74,012 |
| 2019 | 6,75,541 | +8.93% | ~48,000 | 1:14 | 6,28,114 |
| 2020 | 6,85,097 | +1.41% | ~49,000 | 1:14 | 6,35,749 |
| 2021 | 11,58,702 | +69.09% | 48,035 | 1:24 | 11,10,667 |
| 2022 | 9,07,404 | -21.72% | 46,878 | 1:19 | 8,60,526 |
| 2023 | 13,18,955 | +45.35% | ~47,000 | – | – |
| 2024 | 13,35,878 | +1.28% | ~47,000 | 1:28 | – |
- State-Wise Leaders (2020): Andhra Pradesh (35,614), Punjab (33,412), Maharashtra (29,079)—southern and northern states fuel 60% outflows.
- Level Breakdown: Postgraduate dominant (61% growth 2012-24); undergraduates stable at ~3.4 lakh; PhDs rising via scholarships.
Top Destinations: Where Indian Aspirations Land
Canada, US, and UK host 70% of outflows, with engineering (16.4%), math/CS (15.7%), and business (12.6%) leading fields—STEM at 45%. Europe and Asia gain traction amid visa easing.
| Destination | 2016 Enrollment | 2020 | 2024 | Growth Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Canada | 94,240 | 1,79,480 | 4,27,000 | +353% since 2016; 42.9% of Canada’s intl. students Indian |
| US | 4,23,863 | 1,67,582 | 3,37,630 | Overtaken China; H-1B hub |
| UK | 16,559 | ~1,20,000 | 1,85,000 | Post-Brexit surge; 2-yr PG visa boost |
| Australia | 78,103 | 1,15,137 | 1,22,202 | +57%; work rights appeal |
| Germany | 10,820 | ~35,000 | 42,997 | Tuition-free draw; +297% |
- Emerging Hubs: UAE (25,000), Russia (24,940), Ireland (15.3% share), Latvia (17.4%)—affordable alternatives amid US/UK costs.
Trends and Challenges: Visa Walls and Aspirational Pulls
Outflows spiked post-COVID (69% YoY 2021), driven by perceived quality and jobs abroad, but 2024’s 1.28% dip signals caution. Popular streams: 50% PG in business/STEM; PhDs via Fulbright-like aids.
- Growth Drivers: Digital info access, family networks; 62% top-100 JEE rankers abroad.
- Challenges:
- Brain Drain: 16 lakh+ citizenship renunciations since 2011; one-third Silicon Valley tech Indians; hampers R&D.
- Visa/Geopolitical Hurdles: US H-1B fees to $100,000; Canada caps (35% drop Q1 2024); UK post-study work limits; delays deter 20%.
- Costs: Rs 2.9 lakh crore spent 2023-24; families strain, with USD 70B projected by 2025.
- Other: Cultural adaptation, housing shortages; domestic gaps like outdated curricula push 71% HEIs to offshore reluctance.
Economic Impacts: Forex Drain vs. Soft Power Potential
Student spends rival trade deficits—75% of FY24-25’s USD 94B gap—yet remittances reverse via returnees (e.g., USD 43.8B US tuition revenue). Inbound could add Rs 1.92 lakh crore like Canada’s model.
- Outflow Burden: Rs 29,000 crore remittances = 53% higher ed budget; net loss if non-returning.
- Upside: Diaspora philanthropy for USD 10B Bharat Vidya Kosh; offshore campuses (e.g., IIT Madras Zanzibar) retain talent, generate revenue.
Policy Recommendations: 22 Steps to Flip the Script
The report’s 22 recommendations span five themes, with 76 pathways to hit 50% GER by 2035 and 1M inbound by 2047.
- Strategy: Unified mobility framework; Erasmus-like exchanges; scale GIAN/VAJRA for faculty.
- Regulation: Streamline visas; 25% supernumerary seats; fast-track PhD re-entry.
- Finance: $10B research fund (50% diaspora-matched); scholarships integration (e.g., Study in India 2.0 targets 2L students).
- Branding: Global campaigns; alumni networks; hybrid campuses in UAE/Dubai.
- Curriculum: Credit transfer; industry links; 30 best practices like Fulbright-Nehru.
Projections: Inbound to 1.55 lakh (2030) via intensity benchmarking.






