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STEVE FINAN: Dundee should be luring students from Africa – and hoping they bring their families

Like many cities Dundee's population is ageing: persuading students from overseas to study and settle here could be key to future prosperity.

photo shows a group of young boys in a classroom in Somalia.
Could these schoolboys in Somalia offer Dundee a brighter future? Image: Shutterstock.

An influx of young people to breathe life into Dundee would be a great thing.

But how do you get thousands of hard-working, ambitious people to come to a city like ours?

I’d like to add my voice to that of Professor Iain Gillespie, principal of Dundee University, who last week expressed fears over attracting international students and staff to Dundee.

I’d also go a bit further down that line of thinking.

image shows the writer Steve Finan next to a quote: "We should offer incentives to stay to the brightest and best immigrants who have ideas and will start businesses."

Scotland is facing a demographics time bomb.

By 2072 the number of over-65s will have risen to 32% (from 20% today) of the population.

Children will drop from 16% to 12%.

If you are under 40, by the time you reach retirement there won’t be enough taxpayers to fund your pension.

And this is true for many nations.

Professor Iain Gillespie, University of Dundee principal and vice-chancellor.

China, due to the law they had limiting couples to one child, is in deep trouble.

Their vast population is getting old simultaneously.

Yet few countries seem to be addressing this. They’re hiding from it.

Students could fuel Dundee population boom

Despite the world’s population topping nine billion recently, from our point of view the young are in the wrong places.

Youthful, energetic, motivated people are going to become a world commodity.

photo shows a group of older Chinese women sitting on benches chatting.
China is facing the aging population problem due to its one-child policy. Image: Shutterstock.
Photo shows pedestrians
Dundee’s population is also getting older – is student immigration the way to turn it around?

It is imperative that if Scotland isn’t producing enough young people, we import them. Not in their hundreds, but hundreds of thousands.

Once government grasps this as the emergency it is, Dundee should be ready.

We should have plans in place to lead the way.

Have blueprints to boost the size of our university campuses, create an outline plan to expand student accommodation capacity ten or twentyfold.

It is, quite openly, using education to attract tens of thousands of students to Dundee. And bring their extended families, especially children, with them.

photo shows hundreds of graduating students in gowns in Dundee's City Square.
Student celebrations at Dundee University’s Winter Graduations in 2021. Image: Kim Cessford/DC Thomson.

It’s also an investment opportunity.

Our city and our nation’s infrastructure would have to be scaled up.

Imagine the boost to growth figures that would bring.

Send us your brightest and your best

The places to “shop” for students are indicated by looking at the nations with the highest birth rates.

Most are in Africa, south of the Sahara.

We should have talent scouts and recruiters in villages across the Sahel saying: “Stick in at school, we want you in Scotland”.

photo shows schoolgirls outside their school in Niger.
School girls in Niger – potential students and future citizens for Dundee? Image: Shutterstock.
photo shows a young boy reading a book at a wooden bench in a corrugated iron classroom in Somalia.
A students in a classroom in Dadaab, Somalia. Image: Shutterstock.

Nations like Niger, Mali, Somalia, and Cameroon.

Some will take an education and go home or go elsewhere.

But many will make lives here.

Hopefully enough to rejuvenate an old, and getting older, Dundee.

We should offer incentives to stay to the brightest and best immigrants who have ideas and will start businesses.

We’ll find our own Sergey Brin who founded Google, Steve Chen (YouTube), or Pierre Omidyar (eBay).

Canada “gets it”. This is exactly what they are doing.

They plan to attract 1.5 million new Canadians in the next three years.

All of Scotland, indeed most of Europe, will have to do this.

Let’s get ahead. Let’s get planning.

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