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Education in Hong Kong
Hong KongEducation

Academic calls for gradual growth of Hong Kong’s non-local university students

City’s aim to attract top global scholars as part of education hub needs quality focus, cultural integration and rental solutions, says expert

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An academic has called for Hong Kong to gradually expand its non-local university student numbers amid proposals to raise the enrolment cap to 50 per cent. Photo: Karma Lo
Matthew Cheng

Hong Kong should gradually expand its non-local university student numbers to carefully balance their learning experience, social acceptance and potential effects on the rental market, according to an academic specialising in education policy.

Joshua Mok Ka-ho, provost and vice-president of Hang Seng University, also said the city had to increase efforts to attract more top-quality scholars and address high rental prices if it aimed to become an education hub.

In his annual policy address earlier this month, Chief Executive John Lee Ka-chiu proposed raising each public university’s enrolment cap for non-local undergraduate students to 50 per cent of local students, up from the current 40 per cent, starting from the next academic year.

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This measure forms part of efforts to develop Hong Kong into an international education hub.

Mok said the new policy was on the right track but called for a progressive increase in the intake of non-local students, warning that a “bottleneck” in hostel availability would make it difficult for them to secure accommodation, thereby affecting their learning experience.

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He added that a gradual expansion, rather than a sharp influx, would also help improve inclusiveness within society.

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