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WSWS : News
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Australian parliament adopts legislation to restructure universities
By Mike Head
18 December 2003
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On December 4, the Howard government finally succeeded in pushing
though parliament one of its central agenda itemsthe restructuring
of Australian universities into businesses that will be forced
to survive by attracting full fee-paying students and corporate
sponsorship. Just before going into Christmas recess, the Senate
rubber-stamped Education Minister Brendan Nelsons Higher
Education Reform Bill, with all its essential features intact.
The legislation will further shift education costs from the
government to students in order to meet the demands of corporate
Australia for ever-lower taxes. It will subject universities to
the full destructive force of the market, widening the gulf between
a handful of elite institutions and the remainder of the countrys
38 public universities.
The restructuring marks a qualitative turning point in the
user pays agenda that was inaugurated by the Hawke
Labor government in the 1980s when it introduced the Higher Education
Contribution Scheme (HECS). HECS forces students to repay a substantial
portion of the cost of their degrees once they graduate. Despite
its imposition, Australian universities have largely remained
public providers of tertiary education. HECS fees have been pegged
at uniform rates and all universities have continued to offer
a relatively full range of disciplines.
That will now end, with individual universities substantially
free to set their own fee structures, transforming their programs
into commodities that are bought and sold. Students will become
customers, with public and private degree providers competing
to win the best-paying clients in the most profitable corners
of the market.
Similar processes are underway internationally, from the United
Stateswhere privately-endowed Ivy League institutions
cater for a privileged minority while local community colleges
deteriorateto Britain and Germany, where the Blair and Schroeder
governments are currently demanding free market reforms
that will boost prestige universities and reduce the rest to mediocre
vocational colleges servicing the narrow requirements of employers.
Despite the Labor Partys hypocritical claims to oppose
Nelsons legislation, the partys newly-elected leader,
Mark Latham, spelt out the logic of the governments scheme
as far back as November 1999, when he proposed a four-tier university
system. On top would be a small but significant group
of private universities, followed by a second layer of high-prestige
institutions primarily relying upon full fee-paying international
students and other private income sources. The third tier would
consist of universities continuing to scrape by on HECS funds
as they do at present. On the bottom would be free
public universities providing short, vocational degrees in depressed
regional areas.
The Howard governments legislation represents a major
step in this direction. First, it allows universities to increase
HECS fees by up to 25 percent from the start of 2005slightly
less than the 30 percent ceiling originally sought by Nelson.
Many universities are expected to raise their fees to the maximum
level, driving students deeper into poverty and life-long debt.
Typical fees will be about $15,000 for a three-year arts degree,
$20,000 for a science degree and nearly $40,000 for a five-year
law degree.
Second, universities will be permitted to increase the number
of full fee-paying places from 25 percent to 35 percent of enrolments.
Starved of public funds, they will become dependent on this highly
lucrative market, where students pay up to $150,000 for an undergraduate
degree. Australian universities already obtain more than $5 billion
in full fees annually from overseas students, making the industry
one of the countrys largest export earners.
Third, the expansion of full fee places will inevitably curtail
HECS places, lengthening the listalready at about 30,000of
qualified students denied a university place each year. Increasingly
students will be compelled to pay exorbitant prices to get into
the course of their choice, or to simply secure a university place.
Fourth, in order to facilitate the spread of full fees, students
will be offered loans of up to $50,000. The FEE-HELP
scheme will also cover post-graduate students, both domestic and
overseas. Fully private universities, such as Notre Dame and Bond,
will benefit enormously from FEE-HELP. Not surprisingly, they
have hailed the changes, predicting major increases to enrolments.
Finally, the legislation will intensify the subordination of
universities to business demands. It gives Nelson powers to pressure
them into dropping critical or non-vocational courses and forces
them to adopt corporate models of administration.
To get these sweeping changes through the Senate, Nelson accepted
minor concessions, including an increase from $25,000 to $35,000
in the threshold income that graduates have to earn before starting
to repay their HECS debts. He also agreed to provide some extra
scholarships. The minister expressed extreme satisfaction
at the outcome and predicted that the countrys universities
would soon be forced to rationalise, share resources or amalgamate.
For the very first time, we have competitive pricing tensions
between the universities, he gloated.
Students, who already finish their degrees with HECS debts
of $20,000 or more, will be the immediate victims. As well as
providing for fees to rise, the government simultaneously scrapped
an undergraduate loan scheme which allowed HECS students to pay
their living expenses, leaving thousands of students in the lurch.
An actuarial report revealed that students were so hard-pressed
that outstanding loans had mushroomed to $2 billion over the 10-year
life of the scheme.
How the legislation got through
These unprecedented changes to the entire system of tertiary
education are the result of a protracted political process. The
pro-market path began in the 1980s, when the Hawke government
first re-introduced student fees, overturning their abolition
by the Whitlam government in 1974.
Whitlams decision represented a high-water mark in the
social reforms granted to the working class in the post-World
War II economic boom. It opened the way for broader sections of
the population to access tertiary education for the first time.
Hawkes reversal was an integral aspect of the program of
free market economic deregulation that he and Treasurer Paul Keating
imposed between 1983 and 1996.
Elected on the basis of the popular backlash against Labor
in 1996, the Howard government set about deepening the attack
on the right to education, slashing $600 million from university
funding in its first budget. One of Howards most senior
ministers, David Kemp, was assigned the task of substantially
privatising tertiary education. Among other things, he touted
the possibility of introducing a voucher scheme, whereby students
would receive limited sums of money to buy university places.
Students and academics greeted Kemps plan, leaked to
the media in November 1999, with such hostility that the Howard
government subsequently disowned it. With business and media proprietors
demanding the revival of the governments stalled agenda,
Nelson replaced Kemp after the 2001 election and initiated an
18-month consultation process to find ways to dress
up Kemps proposals.
Nelson worked in close collaboration with several university
vice chancellors, who concluded that the only way they could recover
some of the $5 billion stripped from their funding since 1996
was to accede to the governments user-pays agenda.
The support extended to Nelson by the Australian Vice Chancellors
Committee particularly reflected the interests of the best-endowed
institutions, which stand to reap the greatest rewards from fee
deregulation.
The final Nelson package was negotiated behind closed doors
for several weeks with four Independent Senators,
whose votes were needed for the legislation to pass. In order
to avoid further protests or public outcry, the deal was struck
at the very end of the parliamentary year, just after university
and school students had finished their exams and dispersed to
commence their summer holidays. The Labor Party, while formally
against the package, offered no genuine opposition. Like the government,
it remains committed to the escalation of user pays
throughout the education system.
Perhaps the most cynical aspect of the deal, however, was the
role played by the academics union, the National Tertiary
Education Union (NTEU). Together with the vice chancellors, it
urged the four key Senators to pressure Nelson to drop his initial
demand for the forced introduction of specified industrial relations
measures, as well as individual workplace agreements, in return
for universities to access a $404 million governance reform
fund.
After Nelson agreed, the union quickly fell into line. NTEU
president Carolyn Allport described the resulting package, while
flawed, as a major win for universities and
their staff who will now be able to negotiate collective agreements
without the threat of losing government funding. Even as
Nelson continues to demand action against under performing
academics and inflexible work practicesthreatening
to withhold payments from another $55 million workplace
performance poolthe union is holding out to its members
the prospect of obtaining improved pay and conditions through
enterprise bargaining, university by university.
This is nothing but a public commitment by the union that,
in exchange for remaining an active partner in the process, it
will continue to work with the minister and the vice chancellors,
as it has done for the past seven years, to implement the Howard
governments free market agendawhatever the cost to
students and staff. Already, staff-student ratios have fallen
by 40 percent over the past decade, leading to larger classes,
greater reliance on casual lecturers and reduced opportunities
for independent research and writing.
See Also:
National strike closes universities
across Australia
[22 October 2003]
Australian government launches
new offensive against university staff and students
[2 October 2003]
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