A brewing discontent: disenfranchised graduates
In all the noise of various policy changes and studies showing that graduates with the right qualifications are still not securing jobs in their relevant fields, a fundamental question arises: why? What systemic hurdles require deeper examination, beyond reforms to post-study work rights?
Students who came for a world class education and global career pathways now face a different reality. Despite being qualified, capable, and often locally trained, many struggle to secure relevant jobs.
“I did everything right – top marks, internships, networking, but after graduation, I hit a wall. No one would sponsor me,” shared a postgraduate business student in Sydney.
“It’s like we were good enough to pay international fees, but not good enough to be hired or to stay,” said a nursing graduate in the UK.
Graduate underemployment is well documented across the Big Four. But the underlying reasons? Not so much.
We hear the statistics, but not enough about what is driving them. What explains the disconnect between qualifications and outcomes? Is it employer reluctance, lack of industry networks, inconsistent migration settings, or gaps in career readiness support? These questions deserve more scrutiny than they are currently being given.
In Australia, the Grattan Institute reports that nearly 50 percent of international graduates are working in low skilled jobs unrelated to their qualifications within six months of graduating . The 2023 Graduate Outcomes Survey found international students face higher unemployment and lower starting salaries compared to domestic peers. The graduate visa cohort remains underutilised, even as the National Skills Priority List flags urgent shortages in healthcare, engineering, information technology, and education.
In Canada, Statistics Canada found that five years after graduation, international students, especially from non-science and technology fields, earn significantly less than domestic graduates with comparable degrees. Labour market saturation, a surge in post-graduation work permit holders, and study permit caps have compounded the issue. Meanwhile, Canada continues to pursue ambitious immigration targets of more than 465,000 permanent residents per year to meet labour demands in critical sectors (IRCC Immigration Levels Plan 2023–2025).
In the UK, many international graduates on the Graduate Route are working in low wage, non-graduate roles due to limited sponsorship and unclear settlement pathways (Migration Observatory, 2023). This runs counter to the UK Shortage Occupation List, which highlights demand in science, education, and healthcare.
In the US, although the Optional Practical Training program provides a temporary work bridge, significant constraints remain. H-1B visa caps, permanent residency backlogs, and policy uncertainty have created a precarious pathway for international talent. Reports by NAFSA and the Cato Institute show high levels of post-study dropout, even as the US Bureau of Labor Statistics forecasts workforce shortages in software development, healthcare, and advanced manufacturing through 2031.
These patterns reveal a common thread: policy reforms have focused heavily on access and visa entitlements, without addressing structural weaknesses in the education-to-employment pathway. A system that attracts talent but fails to support its success is not sustainable.
Reimagining the international education offer: from transaction to transformation
If this is the reality international graduates face, then we must ask: what kind of experience are we really offering?
International education is not just an economic transaction. It is a social contract, and one that extends far beyond tuition payments, lecture halls, and graduation ceremonies. For decades, it has played a role in diplomacy, innovation, and people to people ties that stretch across generations and borders.
Graduates who succeed in host countries become ambassadors. Some return home to lead companies and shape public policy. Others stay and contribute to local innovation, workforce development, and demographic renewal. Either way, the benefits are mutual, but only if the system delivers on its promise.
When international graduates feel unsupported, underemployed, or unwelcome, the damage is not only personal. It erodes trust in the education to migration to employment promise that underpins the sector. It sends a signal to future cohorts that the promise made may not be kept.
What needs to change?
• Clear and consistent migration pathways tied to real labour demand
• Employer incentives to hire international graduates
• University led transition programs embedded early in the student journey
• Better data on outcomes, not just enrolments
• Active industry engagement beyond advisory roles
• Support to address employer hesitation and build confidence in graduate capability
“Give us a chance to prove ourselves. Most of us don’t want a handout, we just want a fair shot,” said information technology graduate in Melbourne.
If countries want to remain competitive, trusted, and future ready, international graduates must not be treated as short term contributors. They are long term partners in nation building, and it is time our systems recognised that.
Because today’s prospective students are asking sharper, more informed questions than ever before: “What percentage of graduates get a decent paying job in their field? Is there any data on graduate outcomes broken down by institution?”
These are not just questions. They are decision points. Institutions and destinations that can provide clear, transparent, and evidence-based answers will gain trust and remain attractive. Those that cannot will struggle to keep up.
The next era of international education is not just about attracting students. It is about delivering outcomes, building confidence, and designing a system that supports success well beyond graduation.
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