<p>Australia will not allow foreign students to return as Canberra prioritises the return of locals stuck overseas, Prime Minister Scott Morrison said on Friday.</p>.<p>Australia has since March closed its borders to all non-citizens and permanent residents in a bid to slow the spread of Covid-19.</p>.<p>With foreign students worth about A$35 billion ($25.3 billion) a year to the Australian economy, Canberra had hoped to slowly allow overseas students to return in 2021. Trials began earlier this year.</p>.<p>But with thousands of Australians wanting to return, Morrison there is not enough quarantine facilities.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/australia-hopes-to-provide-potential-covid-19-vaccine-by-end-of-2021-914986.html">Australia hopes to provide potential Covid-19 vaccine by end of 2021</a></strong></p>.<p>"There is a queue, and Australians are in the front of the queue," Morrison told reporters in Canberra.</p>.<p>Australia caps the numbers of locals allowed to return home each week in order to minimise the risk of spreading Covid-19.</p>.<p>Once locals arrive, they enter hotel quarantine for two weeks.</p>.<p>The policy deepens a financial black-hole facing Australian education providers, estimated to be worth between A$3.1 billion and A$4.8 billion this year alone, Catriona Jackson, Chief Executive of Universities Australia, told Reuters earlier this year.</p>.<p>Several leading universities have announced sweeping job cuts in a bid to reduce costs.</p>.<p>In October, Morrison's government said it will spend A$1 billion to support university research amid the fall in overseas students.</p>
<p>Australia will not allow foreign students to return as Canberra prioritises the return of locals stuck overseas, Prime Minister Scott Morrison said on Friday.</p>.<p>Australia has since March closed its borders to all non-citizens and permanent residents in a bid to slow the spread of Covid-19.</p>.<p>With foreign students worth about A$35 billion ($25.3 billion) a year to the Australian economy, Canberra had hoped to slowly allow overseas students to return in 2021. Trials began earlier this year.</p>.<p>But with thousands of Australians wanting to return, Morrison there is not enough quarantine facilities.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/australia-hopes-to-provide-potential-covid-19-vaccine-by-end-of-2021-914986.html">Australia hopes to provide potential Covid-19 vaccine by end of 2021</a></strong></p>.<p>"There is a queue, and Australians are in the front of the queue," Morrison told reporters in Canberra.</p>.<p>Australia caps the numbers of locals allowed to return home each week in order to minimise the risk of spreading Covid-19.</p>.<p>Once locals arrive, they enter hotel quarantine for two weeks.</p>.<p>The policy deepens a financial black-hole facing Australian education providers, estimated to be worth between A$3.1 billion and A$4.8 billion this year alone, Catriona Jackson, Chief Executive of Universities Australia, told Reuters earlier this year.</p>.<p>Several leading universities have announced sweeping job cuts in a bid to reduce costs.</p>.<p>In October, Morrison's government said it will spend A$1 billion to support university research amid the fall in overseas students.</p>