Germany's "comprehensive" support for students studying abroad puts it on top of a new index for promoting international higher education, in which it outranks the UK and the US.
The study is part of a research project, conducted for the British Council by the Economist Intelligence Unit, to create what is billed as "the first detailed measure of the international higher education activities of countries across the world."
The British Council's Index for International Education, unveiled in full on 26 March at the organisation's "Going Global" conference in London, looks at national policies, student mobility and international collaboration.
The first of those three subjects is covered by the report's National Policy Index, which ranks 11 countries. Germany tops the table, followed in order by Australia, the UK, China, Malaysia, the US, Japan, Russia and Nigeria, with Brazil and India in equal 10th position.
The study says that the top three countries have the "most open environments, supported by well-defined and ambitious internationalisation strategies".
"However, what sets Germany apart is its fairly even focus on both importing and exporting elements. While it targets 20 per cent growth in the number of inbound students, it also has the most comprehensive outbound-support programmes of any country in this study," it says.
The National Policy Index draws on reports from the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development, the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization and the Observatory on Borderless Higher Education.
The three categories judged were quality assurance; openness (including internationalisation strategy and visa policies) and degree recognition; and access and equity (including the size of scholarships and whether policies are in place to ensure that marginalised domestic students are not displaced by their overseas peers).
Import/export focus puts Germany on top
Source: John Morgan for Times Higher Education, revised by iMOVE, March 2010