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Education

Is the Erasmus program under threat?

Marina Strauss Brussels
April 5, 2020

The COVID-19 pandemic has upended daily life for millions of Europeans. Among them are hundreds of thousands of young people living in different countries as part of the EU's Erasmus exchange program.

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Erasmus logo on the internet
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/M. Gerten

Back in 2015, Italian student Alberto Spatola spent an Erasmus semester in the Slovenian capital, Ljubljana. His five months there changed his life — not only because he made lots of friends, and not only because he learned how important it was to gain a different perspective on the world. Spatola's grandfather was stationed in the region during World War II. "It was very impressive to see how the situation had changed over two generations, for the better," he said.

What better story to summarize the significance of the EU's Erasmus program? According to the European Commission, some 10 million young Europeans have spent time abroad as part of the program that was launched in 1987. Originally an exchange program for universities, the program was later expanded to include internships and voluntary services. In 2018, 853,000 young people spent time abroad as part of the program.

But now, coronavirus is causing chaos for the Erasmus program as well. Spatola, 28, intended to go Brussels in March to do an EU-sponsored internship with the Erasmus Student Network (ESN) and learn French. But he's stuck in Genoa, in northern Italy.

Luckily, he can still do some of the work and get paid for the internship. However, he's not learning French and he's missing out on the human aspects of such exchanges — making friendships with people from all over, the parties and the excursions.

Alberto Spatola
Alberto Spatola says Erasmus 'changed his life'Image: Alberto Spatola/privat

Different approach in Sweden

Anna Pretzl, a 22-year-old Austrian, was already living in Vaxjo in southern Sweden when the pandemic began. But instead of heading back home, she decided to stay. Sweden has taken a different approach to the outbreak, and the restrictions imposed by the government haven't been as strict as in other parts of the EU.

Large gatherings, however, have been banned. For Pretzl, that means no big parties or collective meals with the other students. Nonetheless, she said the atmosphere is still "pretty good" with students whiling away the time playing games, watching Netflix, communicating online and sometimes even going out for walks.

Kostis Giannidis, head of the Erasmus Student Network, told DW in a Skype interview that 36% of Erasmus students have decided to go back home. He said those who could were continuing their studies remotely, but said students were worried about not making their grades or losing money, or fear that their study period abroad will not be recognized.

Read more: Canceled by COVID-19, US-German exchange students face uncertain future

"Higher education institutions are asked to be as flexible and pragmatic as possible to help students achieve the outcomes indicated in their learning agreements, regardless of the students' geographical location," states the European Commission's Erasmus+ website, which provides information for students and institutions about the impact of pandemic on the Erasmus program.

Brexit threatens Erasmus

In many cases, students have been allowed to retain their grants even if they were forced to return home. The European Commission has also said it will reimburse travel expenses. Giannidis told DW that initially, there was a bit of "chaos."

"Students were told to go home, but at the same time countries were closing their borders," he said. Sabine Verheyen, a German MEP and chair of the European Parliament's Committee on Culture and Education, said it was her "utmost priority" to work with the Commission to ensure that young Europeans could return home or remain safe, wherever they were.

Is mobility in danger?

Like everything else, it remains unclear what will happen to the Erasmus program. However, Verheyen still hopes that funds will be doubled or tripled in the next EU budget (for the 2021-2027 period), regardless of the crisis. She told DW that the funds are necessary to expand the program and make it more inclusive, for example, for people with disabilities.

Right now, the question of whether young Europeans will be able to fulfil their Erasmus-related plans depends on how fast states are able to get the pandemic under control and reopen their borders. "We have to return to international mobility as fast as possible," said Verheyen.

Alberto Spatola hopes he will eventually get to Brussels, but said he is "a scared that the coronavirus crisis will lead some to believe that mobility is not essential, but a luxury that we can no longer afford."

Yet he believes it's in times of growing nationalism, like now in his homeland Italy, that more money should be invested in programs such as Erasmus, to ensure that young people can experience what it means to be foreign and live abroad.

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