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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Australia
: Education
Issues
Australian government pours funds into private schools at
the direct expense of public schools
By Erika Zimmer
19 July 2000
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Despite a nation-wide increase of 8,300 pupils in the government
school system this year, $27.5 million, or around 6 percent of
the total, will be cut from federal government funding to public
schools under the Howard government's Enrolment Benchmark Adjustment
(EBA) scheme.
The EBA is a financial formula introduced in 1997 aimed at
undermining public education and accelerating the privatisation
of school education. It penalises government schools when the
increase in their enrolments is less than the increase in private
school enrolments. This year, for example pupil enrolments at
private schools rose by 19,270 more than those at public schools.
Consequently, under the EBA formula, federal funding to government
schools has been cut.
The crippling effect of the EBA on government schools applies
even if their enrolments go up. For example, in the north-eastern
state of Queensland, public school enrolments increased by 5,000
last year, yet federal government funding declined by $5 million.
New South Wales, the most populous state, has fared the worst:
a mere 40 fewer pupils enrolled in government schools in NSW saw
their share of federal funding reduced by $17 million.
The passage of the Howard government's States Grants (Primary
and Secondary Education Assistance) Act in December 1996, containing
the EBA formula, marked a major turning point in the ongoing decline
of the public education system. However, the groundwork for it
was prepared by previous federal governments, Labor and Liberal
alike, and their state counterparts.
Throughout the twentieth century, Australian public schools
have existed alongside schools that are nominally private, yet
are also beneficiaries of government funds. The extent of government
subsidies to so-called private school is unmatched
anywhere in the world and it has steadily increased throughout
the post-war period.
In 1974, state and federal governments met just under 40 percent
of the cost of a student place at a private school. Present levels
of funding have risen to more than 75 percent. This has allowed
the wealthier schools to entrench their privileged position and
produced an increase in the number of poorer parish, mainly Catholic,
schools. Nevertheless, enrolments at private schools remained
relatively stable, at around 25 percent of all school enrolments,
from 1890 to 1990.
To encourage the drift to the private system that has occurred
during the past decade, the Howard government is not only massively
boosting funding to private schoolsincreasing funding by
more than 40 per cent by 2003-4it is also cutting deeper
into essential funding in the public school sector. Federal government
cuts to state schools in NSW over the last three years demonstrate
the destructive character of the EBA: $4.6 million less in 1998,
$10 million less in 1999, now $17 million less, with projections
of another $26 million to be cut next year.
The impact has been larger class sizes, fewer highly qualified
teachers, cutbacks in specialty teachers, under-resourced facilities,
lack of course and subject options, growing truancy rates, greater
workloads for staff. Overall, the standard of public school education
is deteriorating. It is hardly surprising, therefore, that private
school enrolments are reaching unprecedented levels, already above
30 percent.
The publication of the latest EBA funding cuts has resulted
in something of a public outcry. Press reports refer to a major
row developing over the EBA between the federal and state governments.
The teacher unions have pledged to fight. Behind the hype, however,
the record of both the state governments and the unions over the
last decade reveals no fundamental differences with the Howard
government's agenda.
The launching of the EBA itself is a prime example. The States
Grants Act came into force without any campaign waged against
it by the teacher unions, or any public debate or opposition from
the Labor party. Most parents and teachers knew nothing of its
existence, let alone what its impact would be on the public school
system.
Moreover, the Act was passed after a decade of bi-partisan
federal and state government cuts to public education funding,
including significant job losses and a battery of measures aimed
at forcing schools to compete against each other in order to survive.
See Also:
Australia:
Education Issues
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