Europe | Getting them while they’re young

Finland’s shrinking high schools are importing pupils from abroad

And educating them at taxpayers’ expense

Children walk in snow in Finland
Photograph: Getty Images

IDEALLY, MARIANNE KORKALAINEN’S high school in Rautavaara, a tiny town in eastern Finland, would enrol at least 20 new pupils each year. This autumn, her shrinking municipality will send her only about 12. But Ms Korkalainen, the head teacher, has a plan: she intends to invite half a dozen youngsters from poorer countries to help fill her empty seats. Eager adolescents from places such as Myanmar, Vietnam and Tanzania will swap their tropical cities for her snowy bolthole. They will receive a Finnish education, at Finnish taxpayers’ expense.

This article appeared in the Europe section of the print edition under the headline “Getting them while they’re young”

France’s centre cannot hold

From the June 29th 2024 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

More from Europe

Will a new “pact” of ten laws help Europe ease its migrant woes?

It will require an extraordinary number of institutions to work together

Amid the bombs, Ukrainians rediscover the beach

Odessa gives itself permission to tan again


Who was behind the arson attacks on railways before the Olympics?

With thousands stranded, suspicion falls on Russia or Iran


Italian right-wingers have renamed Milan’s airport after Silvio Berlusconi

A finger in the eye of those who detested the late populist leader

European countries are banding together on missile defence

The Ukraine war shows how dangerously few interceptors they have

Peter Magyar is reinvigorating Hungary’s struggling opposition

Attacking Viktor Orban’s corruption wins votes for a political newcomer