Funds sent abroad for studies fall to 8-year low
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Funds sent abroad for studies fall to 8-year low

MUMBAI: Indiaโ€™s outward remittances for overseas education fell 24% year-on-year to about $0.32billion in Aug 2025 from $0.42billion in Aug 2024. The figure was the lowest for Aug since 2017, a month that typically sees higher remittances at the start of the academic season in US.โ€œThe 24% fall in education remittances highlights how closely Indiaโ€™s foreign exchange outflows are tied to a complex mix of global policy, economic, and behavioural shifts shaping Indiaโ€™s outward forex flows,โ€ said Pavan Kavad, MD of currency exchange firm Prithvi Exchange (India) Ltd.Education-related spending, one of the biggest components under the Liberalised Remittance Scheme after travel, is losing momentum, even accounting for pocket money wired under the โ€œmaintenance of close relativesโ€ category.

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Remittances see steady decline after peaking at $2.3bn in 2021

From $787.8million in 2017, remittances surged to $1.95bn in 2019, before the pandemic lowered it to $1.12bn in 2020. The post-lockdown rebound of 2021 ($2.37 bn) proved short-lived. Since then, slide has been steady.โ€œStricter visa norms in top study destinations such as the US, UK, and Canada have had a direct impact on the timing and volume of education remittances,โ€ Kavad added. โ€œMany students face higher rejection rates or prolonged processing, forcing families to delay or defer payments.โ€Education counsellor Karan Gupta said a shift is underway. โ€œThose heading for diploma courses or mid-tier universities abroad are pulling back, because the return on investment no longer stacks up,โ€ he said. Another counsellor, Pratibha Jain, said when โ€œthe USA is shutting its doors on our students, they are not going to other countries, rather staying back, right here at home.โ€ She added that Indiaโ€™s own universities are now โ€œoffering a range of courses, many at par with the world,โ€ prompting more students to stay back for undergraduate studies and look overseas only for postgraduate programmes.Gupta, however, pointed out that top performers continue to apply abroad in record numbers. โ€œAdmissions have doubled or even tripled in some cases,โ€ he said. โ€œWhat weโ€™re watching now isnโ€™t just fewer students going overseas โ€” itโ€™s a recalibration of expectations, priorities, and financial decisions among families and institutions alike.โ€With annual education costs soaring โ€” CAD 30,000 in Canada, ยฃ22,000 in the UK โ€” and a weakening rupee, families are also turning to cheaper alternatives overseas such as Australia and New Zealand, which offer simpler visa rules and lower living costs.โ€œMany parents have become increasingly cautious,โ€ Kavad said. โ€œTheyโ€™re opting for partial payments or splitting remittances to manage currency volatility and uncertainties in foreign admission timelines. The moderation in education-related outflows isnโ€™t just about fewer students going abroad โ€” it reflects a more cautious and strategic approach to overseas spending.โ€



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