
Analysis - Trump travel curbs pose revenue challenges for U.S. colleges
By Megan Davies and Robin Respaut
ricky l
The immediate impact is that now foreign students are less likely to choose US Universities as their choice of studies and will pick other Countries that are more welcoming to foreign students.
US Universities and colleges will not be able to earn foreign tuition fees - and will have immediate impact to their earnings.
So did Trump help the US Universities and colleges or sabo them?
US Universities and colleges will not be able to earn foreign tuition fees - and will have immediate impact to their earnings.
So did Trump help the US Universities and colleges or sabo them?

ricky l
This is just the beginning.
There are more to come if Trump begin to adopt confrontational economic policies against US trade partners.
More US businesses will be burned badly - the same go with its trade partners.
It will be a lose-lose scenarios.
US Universities and colleges losing foreign student revenue - is just one example and there are no loss to the foreign students as they have many other Countries to choose from.
There are more to come if Trump begin to adopt confrontational economic policies against US trade partners.
More US businesses will be burned badly - the same go with its trade partners.
It will be a lose-lose scenarios.
US Universities and colleges losing foreign student revenue - is just one example and there are no loss to the foreign students as they have many other Countries to choose from.

marie
Being a student and entering a country to stay indefinitely are two different issues. Most students return HOME unless the country is governed by weak politicians.
ricky lMany foreign students are now having a very negative views about US and its xenophobic attitudes towards foreigners.
Time will tell whether more foreign students will study in US or go somewhere else that welcome foreign students and are less hostile to foreigners.- Yahoo ReaderCome on stop exaggerating the importance of Iran, Iraq, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen. How many countries or companies actually need them for trade/tourism/business?
- ricky lUS bomb Iraq.
US bomb Syria.
US bomb Yemen.
US bomb Libya.
US bomb Somalia.
US bomb Sudan.
US intervene in Iran politics.
Now Trump say he will leave all these refugees to Australia and Trump say it has nothing to do with US.
Why should Australia be inheriting all these problems created by US? - ricky lYou think the World is blind and deaf?
The World will be able to judge and see for themselves should they go elsewhere for education that at least uphold justice, fairness and good moral values.
- ricky lWho will want to study in a place that preach and practice all the negative values and morality?
- ricky lStudents want to learn knowledge and facts - not alternative facts.
RELATED CONTENT
View Photo
Is Trump’s Travel Ban Already Hurting US Tourism?
President Trump’s controversial travel ban may end up keeping out more people than he originally intended.Early evidence suggests that fewer would-be travelers from Canada, the United Kingdom and beyond are searching for flights to the U.S. since Trump’s executive order last weekend suspending entry for immigrants and refugees from seven predominantly Muslim countries.Some of it may stem from opposition to the ban, with some people taking to Twitter to announce they won’t be visiting the U.S. for the next four years, using the hashtag #boycottUSA.This could spell trouble for the U.S. economy if this travel boycott goes from blip to trend. The country welcomed 77.5 million international visitors in 2015, according to the U.S. Travel Association. International travel spending directly supported 1.1 million U.S. jobs and $28.4 billion in wages that year. And each overseas traveler shells out $4,400 during their stays.Cheapflights.com told The Fiscal Times that UK residents searching for U.S. flights declined by a quarter this week versus the previous week, before the ban went into effect.The booking site also found that the number of Canadian searches for U.S. flights between Friday, Jan. 27 and Tuesday, Jan. 31 was 27 percent lower than the average Friday-Tuesday volume for the preceding three weeks. Instead, Canadians showed increased interest in other destinations, including Taiwan, Greece and South Africa, according to Cheapflights.“We ran the same comparison for searches from all points outside the U.S., including Canada, and found a 24-percent drop,” said Emily Fisher, North American spokeswoman for the company.Source: U.S. Department of Commerce/U.S. Travel AssociationThe drop-off peaked over the weekend, but volume remained down 20 percent on Monday and Tuesday of this week compared to the same days in the previous three weeks, she noted.We also reached out to Expedia, which declined to comment for the article. Travelocity and Kayak did not respond to requests for comment.Top Reads from The Fiscal Times:@YahooSG on Twitter