New Zealand Prime Minister Scholarship Program Discontinued Till Further Notice
Education New Zealand has confirmed that the Prime Minister’s Scholarships for Asia and Latin America, one of the country’s flagship outbound mobility schemes, will be wound down following decisions taken in the Government’s Budget 2025. The change took effect on 1 July 2025, ending more than a decade of state-funded study and internship placements that had become a quiet pillar of New Zealand’s soft-power strategy in two of the world’s fastest-growing regions. This year in 2026 NZ Prime minister scholarship is still not open for new applicants.
The agency said funding for the programme has been reprioritized, with ministers framing the move as part of a broader push to deliver fiscally sustainable public services and concentrate departmental spending on core activities. The decision lands at a moment when Wellington is tightening discretionary outlays across the board, and outbound scholarships, however well-regarded, have proved an easier target than frontline services.
A Managed Wind-Down, Not a Sudden Stop!
Crucially, ENZ has stressed that the closure is being handled as an orderly transition rather than an abrupt termination. Current recipients, along with the final group round confirmed in June, will continue to receive full support up to 30 June 2026. That includes scholars who have not yet travelled overseas, who will retain access to tuition coverage at offshore institutions, return flights, internship contributions, living and accommodation allowances, and visa and insurance costs.
In practical terms, the 2025 cohort becomes the last. Applications for the 2025 group round closed on 11 April, drawn from a pool that ENZ had encouraged to apply through an information webinar held on 4 February. No further intakes are planned.
A Twelve-Year Footprint Across Two Regions
Since its launch in 2013, the Prime Minister’s Scholarship programme has supported more than 3,810 recipients across 12 countries in Asia and Latin America, with ENZ’s own surveys reporting that 98 per cent of alumni would recommend it to others. Eligibility has been deliberately broad: open to New Zealand citizens and permanent residents aged 18 and over, regardless of whether they were currently enrolled in formal study, the scheme aimed to seed regional fluency across professions rather than just universities.
My Take: A Quiet Loss of Strategic Depth!
The fiscal logic is defensible. The strategic logic is harder to justify. Programmes that cultivate first-hand familiarity with Jakarta, São Paulo, Hanoi or Mexico City are precisely the kind of long-horizon investment that small, trade-exposed economies tend to regret cutting. New Zealand’s competitors in the Indo-Pacific are expanding, not contracting, their outbound mobility budgets. A successor scheme, even a leaner one, would be a sensible item on the next Budget’s agenda.