One reason could be tax. Other is simply the perks of a British citizenship. I have couple of friends who were born in US and lived there for few years but now studying in India in public universities. But they haven't given up their US citizenship. One reason was that the bureaucracy in India takes so long that between the process of changing citizenship, there's a period of time when you become stateless that is neither a citizen of India or the other country and that's a risky place to be wrt travel etc if you don't know how long the whole process will take. They would pay fees in terms of international students even though they had been living here for years now.
Second reason is simply the perks, after graduation I suppose a lot of them would go back to US to work for higher wages, get better opportunities for their major. Those who choose for PhD have it cushy, since you can skip a lot of tests and unnecessary hassle by being a citizen. Academia becomes a lot easier if you are already a citizen of your proposed country.
Not that any of this applies to Alia, 😆 but I'm pretty sure there are loopholes in and around which gives her perks to escape tax brackets by not being an Indian citizen. If she's planning to deliver in UK, being a citizen makes it a whole lot easier.
Edited by DetachednNumb - 3 years ago
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