Higher Education Is Growing Faster Than Ever — But Access Remains Deeply Unequal
The world is witnessing an unprecedented expansion of higher education. Universities are enrolling more students than at any other point in history, international study is becoming increasingly common, and women are participating in higher education in greater numbers than men. On the surface, these developments suggest remarkable progress toward a more educated and connected global society.
Yet a new UNESCO report serves as an important reminder that growth and equity are not the same thing.
According to UNESCO’s first Higher Education Global Trends Report, the number of students enrolled in higher education worldwide has surged from around 100 million in 2000 to 269 million in 2024. Today, nearly 43 percent of young people of higher-education age are enrolled in tertiary education. This dramatic expansion reflects the growing recognition that higher education is no longer a luxury for a select few but an essential pathway to economic opportunity, social mobility, and national development.
However, beneath these impressive global figures lies a more complex reality.
A World Divided by Educational Opportunity
While higher education participation has increased worldwide, access remains highly uneven across regions.
In Western Europe and North America, around 80 percent of young people are enrolled in higher education. In contrast, only 9 percent of young people in sub-Saharan Africa participate in tertiary education. Other regions fall somewhere in between, including Latin America and the Caribbean at 59 percent, the Arab States at 37 percent, and South and West Asia at 30 percent.
These disparities highlight one of the central challenges facing global education policymakers. The expansion of higher education has not occurred equally, and millions of capable students continue to face barriers related to geography, income, infrastructure, and institutional capacity.
The gap becomes even more apparent when examining student success. While enrollment has grown rapidly, graduation rates have improved only modestly. UNESCO reports that the global graduation ratio increased from 22 percent in 2013 to just 27 percent in 2024, suggesting that getting students into university is only part of the challenge. Ensuring that they successfully complete their studies remains an equally pressing priority.
The Rise of Global Student Mobility
One of the most significant developments of the past two decades has been the internationalization of higher education.
The number of students studying outside their home countries has more than tripled, rising from 2.1 million in 2000 to nearly 7.3 million in 2023. Yet despite this growth, international mobility still benefits only a small fraction of the world’s student population—about 3 percent.
Traditional study destinations continue to dominate. The United States, the United Kingdom, Australia, Germany, Canada, Russia, and France collectively host roughly half of all international students. At the same time, newer destinations such as Türkiye and the United Arab Emirates are rapidly emerging as major education hubs, reflecting changing patterns of global influence and regional integration.
Perhaps most notably, students are increasingly choosing to study closer to home. In Latin America and the Caribbean, intra-regional mobility has grown substantially, while students from Arab countries are increasingly opting for universities within the Gulf region and Jordan rather than pursuing degrees primarily in Europe or North America.
This shift signals a broader transformation in global higher education. Strong regional ecosystems are beginning to complement—and in some cases challenge—the long-standing dominance of traditional Western destinations.
Progress for Women, But Leadership Gaps Persist
The report also highlights one of the most encouraging trends in higher education: the growing participation of women.
Globally, there are now 114 women enrolled in higher education for every 100 men. Gender parity has been achieved in nearly every region except sub-Saharan Africa. Particularly notable is the progress in Central and Southern Asia, where female participation has risen dramatically over the past two decades.
Yet the story is far from complete.
Women remain underrepresented at the doctoral level and continue to occupy only about a quarter of senior leadership positions in academia. The findings suggest that while access barriers are gradually falling, structural obstacles to advancement remain firmly in place.
The challenge is no longer simply getting women into universities. It is ensuring that they have equal opportunities to advance into research leadership, institutional governance, and academic decision-making roles.
The Financing Question
As student numbers continue to rise, financing has emerged as one of the most critical issues confronting higher education systems worldwide.
UNESCO notes that governments invest, on average, about 0.8 percent of GDP in higher education. At the same time, fiscal pressures and budget constraints are forcing many institutions to do more with less. The result is growing concern about maintaining educational quality while expanding access.
The role of private institutions has become increasingly significant in this context. Private universities now account for roughly one-third of global enrollment, with particularly high participation in regions such as Latin America. In countries including Brazil, Chile, Japan, and South Korea, private institutions educate the overwhelming majority of students.
Yet affordability remains a challenge. Only about one-third of countries legally guarantee tuition-free public higher education, raising important questions about who bears the cost of educational expansion and how systems can remain inclusive.
Inclusion Still Has a Long Way to Go
The report’s findings on equity are particularly striking.
Only one-third of countries have established dedicated programs to improve access for underrepresented groups. Although some nations have reduced or eliminated fees for targeted populations, large gaps persist.
The situation is especially challenging for refugees and displaced persons. While refugee participation in higher education has increased dramatically—from just 1 percent in 2019 to 9 percent in 2025—most still face significant barriers to enrollment.
One of the most common obstacles is the inability to verify academic credentials lost during displacement. UNESCO’s Qualifications Passport initiative seeks to address this issue by helping refugees demonstrate their educational achievements even when formal documentation is unavailable.
Such efforts underscore an important principle: expanding higher education requires not only more classroom seats but also systems that recognize and accommodate the diverse experiences of learners.
Preparing Universities for a Digital Future
The rapid growth of higher education is occurring alongside another transformative force: technology.
Digital platforms, online learning environments, and artificial intelligence are reshaping teaching, assessment, and student support systems. Yet UNESCO’s report reveals that institutional preparedness remains limited. In 2025, only one in five universities had a formal policy governing the use of artificial intelligence.
This gap raises important questions about governance, ethics, quality assurance, and academic integrity. As AI becomes increasingly integrated into learning and research, universities will need clearer frameworks to harness its benefits while managing its risks.
Growth Alone Is Not Enough
The central message emerging from UNESCO’s report is both encouraging and cautionary.
Higher education has expanded at an extraordinary pace, opening opportunities for millions of people around the world. International mobility is growing, gender gaps are narrowing, and new educational hubs are emerging across multiple regions.
Yet access remains deeply unequal. Completion rates lag behind enrollment growth. Financial pressures threaten quality. Refugees and marginalized communities continue to face significant barriers. And institutions are still adapting to technological disruption.
The next phase of higher education development will therefore require more than expansion. It will require a deliberate focus on inclusion, quality, affordability, and sustainability.
The challenge facing governments, universities, and international organizations is no longer simply to grow higher education systems. It is to ensure that the benefits of that growth are shared more equitably across societies and regions.
In the decades ahead, success will not be measured solely by how many students enter higher education, but by who gets the opportunity to participate, who succeeds, and who ultimately benefits from the transformative power of learning.
