The Higher Education Policy Institute (HEPI) and Kaplan International Pathways released 'The costs and benefits of international students by parliamentary constituency' research in an attempt to push the government to introduce more welcoming policies for international students to stem falling numbers in recent years.
The analysis concentrated on the cohort of international first-year students attending UK universities in 2015-16,when Indian students comprised the third-largest group of overseas students in the UK at 9,095, after China's 62,105 and 10,545 from the US.
The HEPI now hopes that its research would add further impetus to demands for international student numbers to be removed from the overall annual immigration figures set by the Theresa May led Conservative party government.
"Trying to persuade the Home Office that international students nearly always benefit the UK can feel like banging one's head against a brick wall.
More From This Section
Our work includes all the potential costs and conclusively proves these are small compared to the huge benefits," said Nick Hillman, director of HEPI.
The HEPI wants MAC to use its data and report earlier than the planned deadline of September this year.
Linda Cowan, managing director of Kaplan International Pathways, warned that the UK was showing signs of losing ground to countries like Australia in recruiting international students.
"The challenge now is to ensure the UK provides a compelling and attractive offer as the best place to study. To be successful, we need a bold commitment from government as it considers the Immigration Bill to show the UK welcomes international students more than ever. A key step would be to stop counting students as immigrants in net migration statistics," she said.
London alone gains 4.6 billion pounds a year, with Sheffield the biggest beneficiary in proportion to its economy.
The latest data collated by London Economics for the report calculated the financial contribution of overseas students, such as spending on tuition and living expenses, and balanced that against costs, including the extra pressure on local services and non-repayment of loans.
The report seeks to provide comprehensive evidence that overseas students are a significant benefit and that students from outside the European Union (EU), who pay higher fees, are worth 102,000 pounds each to the UK economy.