Students in England now pay the highest university tuition fees in the world.
Average annual charges are twice those in Australia and about six times more than in Switzerland and Italy.
Even
the US offers a cheaper education to undergraduates, according to
analysis of almost 50 countries by the Organisation for Economic
Co-operation and Development.
This OECD graph shows average tuition fees charged by universities in
various countries, along with the proportion of students who benefit
from public loans, scholorships or grans at bachelor's level
The report, the first to include data after the fee cap in England increased to £9,000 in 2012, showed the average charge across all universities was around £6,000 a year.
The US had
the second highest average fees at around £5,300 – although famed Ivy
League universities such as Harvard and Yale charge significantly more
than those in the UK.
Japan
came in third at around £3,300, followed by Canada, Korea, Australia
and New Zealand. In Australia, fees are around £2,600 while in Italy and
Switzerland they are just under £1,000.
Last year’s study showed the UK was the fifth most expensive in the world, behind Chile, South Korea, America and Japan.
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