do you guys seriously trade because you have not researched a bit most of your data and opinion are outdated by 10 years and factually incorrect out of the data you put out only the need to generate employment for 200 million people is correct hence the opinion you formed is outdated also your opinion on economic impact of students seems to more politically motivated rather than generating profit for your clients.
I think almost all students are doing this, not just Indian students. The main point is the statistics agencies treat the numbers really weirdly. Say an international student earns $30,000 working part time jobs in Australia and then spends that money in Australia on food, rent, entertainment, uni fees etc. Bizarrely, this adds $30,000 to Australia's exports. The point we make in the video is twofold (1) You can call this an export, but it ain't, so don't get excited about growth in Australian education exports (2) Indian students are more likely to be working than Chinese ones.
Do you have comments enabled?
Hm , Ur in every breath from these two so call professional ! you got to be F @# kidding me ! !
do you guys seriously trade because you have not researched a bit
most of your data and opinion are outdated by 10 years and factually incorrect
out of the data you put out only the need to generate employment for 200 million people is correct
hence the opinion you formed is outdated
also your opinion on economic impact of students seems to more politically motivated rather than generating profit for your clients.
Indian students are also taking local jobs, during and after graduation.
I think almost all students are doing this, not just Indian students. The main point is the statistics agencies treat the numbers really weirdly. Say an international student earns $30,000 working part time jobs in Australia and then spends that money in Australia on food, rent, entertainment, uni fees etc. Bizarrely, this adds $30,000 to Australia's exports.
The point we make in the video is twofold (1) You can call this an export, but it ain't, so don't get excited about growth in Australian education exports (2) Indian students are more likely to be working than Chinese ones.
+1@The Equilibriumist