Monday, 27 December 2010

U.S. alarmed by sharp drop in Japanese enrollments

Monday, Dec. 27, 2010

Officials fear trend may hurt long-term ties

Kyodo News

The U.S. government is taking steps to encourage more Japanese students to study at U.S. universities out of concern that the recent sharp drop in Japanese enrollments might result in weakening bilateral relations over the long run.


The number of Japanese students who entered U.S. universities in fall last year dropped 15 percent from a year earlier to around 24,800, a sharp fall compared with around 47,000 in 2001, according to the U.S. Institute of International Education.

Japan placed sixth on the nationality list of students studying in the United States last year, while China, listed top, increased enrollments by around 30 percent to some 127,600. India ranked second, followed by South Korea.

The declines in Japanese enrollment are blamed on the economic slowdown that followed the collapse of the bubble economy in the 1990s and the growing tendency among Japanese youth to prefer studying domestically to going abroad.

To stem the ongoing trend that Tokyo and Washington fear might lead to atrophying of ties between the two nations, Prime Minister Naoto Kan and President Barack Obama agreed in their talks in November to step up measures to broaden contacts between Japanese and Americans. They also confirmed that they should make use of the Japanese government's program for inviting Americans to teach English at Japanese schools.

The U.S. Embassy in Japan is also weighing in by sponsoring an English speech contest by Japanese high school students in November in Tokyo.

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