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Poor people study in cheap countries.
Countries suitable for poor people to study abroad are Malaysia, Singapore, Thailand, Italy, South Korea, Japan and the Netherlands.

1 which countries are suitable for poor people to study abroad?

I Malaysia, Thailand and Singapore

Tuition and living expenses: 8-65438+ 10,000 yuan/year.

It belongs to the Commonwealth education system. Take Indi University, the largest private university in Malaysia, as an example. This university is a first-class medical doctor university (domestic 985 university) with a long history and large scale in Malaysia. Studying in such a first-class university not only has a pure English environment, but also costs only 1/3 of studying in the UK, which is lower than the cost of studying directly in the UK for one year.

Second, France, Germany, Italy

Tuition and living expenses: 60,000-80,000 yuan/year.

France, Germany, Italy and other European countries implement public education, which can be enrolled free of tuition, and the annual cost is only 60,000-80,000 yuan. Moreover, most countries allow students to work, and many freshmen can completely meet their expenses abroad by working income. Moreover, many colleges and universities also offer master's courses in English teaching, and accept students' applications according to their English scores.

Third, South Korea.

Tuition and living expenses: 8-65438+ 10,000 yuan/year.

The South Korean government stipulates that the tuition fees of Korean students are lower than those of Korean students, and some schools can even waive 50% to 70% of the tuition fees. For outstanding China students, many universities in South Korea have adopted preferential policies of halving or even exempting tuition fees.

Fourth, Japan.

Tuition+living expenses:12-150,000 yuan/year.

On the premise that Japan plans to recruit 300,000 international students, there is great potential for studying in Japan, and the requirements for guarantee procedures, Japanese level and education level are not too high, which invisibly improves the visa rate. The proportion of "tuition-free" is relatively large. About 90% of international students in national universities are free, about 50% in public universities, and some outstanding students in private universities are free of tuition. The Japanese government also provides a student loan policy for international students and supports international students to work.