Education partnerships advance through administrative decisions rather than bare headline reforms. During his visit to India, Emmanuel Macron drafted a set of mobility and research measures intended to expand the presence of Indian students in France over the next five years.The announcement combines visa changes, institutional collaboration, and research initiatives. Together, they signal an attempt to move student exchange from a limited flow into a structured academic corridor between France and India.
A numerical target backed by policy adjustments
France currently receives around 10,000 Indian students each year. Macron said the two governments have decided to raise that number to 30,000 by 2030.The expansion, he suggested, requires both universities and governments to play a more active role in outreach and facilitation.“In India, 10 to 15 years ago, it was not the number one source of students. Let’s be honest. So I want our universities and high schools to do much more, but we will do as well much more in terms of administrative facilities,” he said.The emphasis is not only on attracting applicants but also on ensuring that procedures do not interrupt academic timelines.
Visa reforms aimed at aligning with academic realities
France will simplify its visa process for Indian students, particularly those enrolled in long duration programmes such as doctoral studies.Macron said long term visas will match the length of academic courses. “If a PhD takes three years and I give a visa for one year, that is not practical,” he said.He added that the French government would adjust administrative processes to make them more predictable for students and institutions.“So on the French side, we will clearly streamline this approach in order to have something which meets the expectations and is much more practical for the students and the schools,” he said. Alongside this, France announced a visa free transit facility intended to ease travel logistics for Indian nationals passing through French territory, a step expected to benefit students travelling for study or academic exchanges.
Education cooperation linked to AI collaboration
Macron placed student mobility within a broader framework of cooperation in Artificial Intelligence (AI). He said India and France aim to build their own AI models rather than depend entirely on technological ecosystems in the United States or China.He stressed that sustained investment in computing power, skilled talent, and financial resources would be necessary to strengthen these systems.
Institutional partnership launched in New Delhi
As part of this effort, Macron, along with Union Health Minister Jagat Prakash Nadda, inaugurated the Indo French Campus on AI in Global Health at the All India Institute of Medical Sciences.The campus is intended to promote research and innovation in AI driven healthcare, with a focus on applying technology to disease detection, medical research, and system level efficiency.
Framing AI as a development tool
Macron also referred to discussions at the AI Impact Summit in New Delhi, where he highlighted the role of responsible and ethical AI deployment. He said such technologies can contribute to areas including disease detection, energy transition, and productivity improvement.
What this means for students
For Indian students considering France, the changes may appear first in the form of longer visa validity, clearer administrative pathways, and expanded academic partnerships. Over time, research collaboration in fields such as healthcare technology and Artificial Intelligence may create new study and training routes linked to joint institutional work.The success of the 30,000 student target will depend on whether these procedural adjustments translate into smoother admissions, stable residency timelines, and sustained cooperation between universities. If implemented consistently, the policy shift could reshape France’s position as a destination for Indian students seeking education tied to research and innovation.