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Australia: Higher education reform package advances user-pays
agenda
By Erika Zimmer
11 June 2003
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Last months federal budget highlights the Howard governments
intention of pushing ahead with its user-pays agenda
for Australian universities. Described by Treasurer Peter Costello
as the biggest shake-up and restructure of the higher education
system, it signals a further attack on state provision of
higher education with billions of dollars in university funding
to be directly provided by students.
This will be achieved through two measures. On the one hand,
Higher Education Contribution Scheme (HECS) fees, the existing
partially government subsidised scheme that provides for a proportion
of university places, are set to increase by up to 30 percent.
On the other, the proportion of university places open to full-fee
paying students will be doubled, from 25 to 50 percent. From 2005-6,
when the new program begins, half of all undergraduate places
on offer will be available to students paying full fees.
Taken together, the measures dramatically transfer the burden
of higher education funding away from the government, placing
it squarely on the backs of students and their families.
In a comparatively short period, Australias higher education
system has undergone an historic transformation. Just one generation
ago, the Whitlam Labor government scrapped university fees in
a measure that was popularly regarded as a step towards a more
equal society. Little more than a decade later, however, the Hawke
and Keating Labor government re-introduced the principle of user-pays.
This provided the framework for subsequent governments to ever
more openly pursue a privatisation agenda for higher education.
Access to tertiary education for broad masses of people, a
basic requirement for the development of a modern, cultured society,
has been overturned. Instead, governments, in line with big business
directives, have slashed spending on universities and opened up
tertiary education as a new field of profit making for private
investors. As a result, Australian students now pay a higher proportion
of university funding than in any other OECD country.
In 1989, Labor introduced fees for domestic students in the
form of HECS, an income-contingent, non-interest bearing student
loan scheme. By 1996, when Labor was swept from office, HECS charges
constituted 20 percent of the cost of a university degree. The
incoming Howard government, in addition to inflicting a $600 million
budget cut on Australian universities, a blow from which they
have never recovered, wasted no time in increasing HECS costs.
Currently HECS charges amount to 40 percent of the cost of a degree.
This proportion is set to rise to 56 percent, according to the
National Tertiary Education Union, if all the universities apply
the 30 percent surcharge.
Howard government agenda
The budget measures are based on reforms outlined
in Education Minister Brendan Nelsons Backing Australias
Ability, a second attempt by the Howard government to push
through a sweeping transformation in the higher education system.
In November 1999, three years after the Liberal government came
to office, Nelsons predecessor David Kemp, leaked a radical
blueprint for the deregulation and privatisation of universities
to the media.
Kemp proposed the introduction of a voucher system and the
replacement of HECS with a loans scheme charging market rates.
These measures were greeted with broad hostility from students
and academics. A surprise defeat of the state Liberal government
in Victoria forced Howard to disown Kemps submission.
Backing Australias Ability, however, reprises
the main thrust of Kemps proposals. While not using the
term voucher, Nelsons package introduces a five-year
cut-off for students in government supported places, a move designed
to crack down on students taking too long to complete
their degrees. A $30 million information tracking system is to
be set up to monitor students progress.
In addition, the measures include the introduction of the Higher
Education Loan Program (HELP) for fee-paying students at public
and some private universities. This program will impose commercial-style
conditions for student loans with interest rates at 6.5 percent.
The same rates will also be levied on HECS surcharges. According
to a report in the Sydney Morning Herald, Nelson sold
his package to federal cabinet by claiming that HELP would deliver
the government more than $2 billion in savings within eight years.
Nelson has attempted to counter widespread criticisms of the
reforms by claiming that it provides additional government
money for universities and that university fee hikes will not
deter students from attending university.
According to Nelson, Backing Australias Ability
injects $1.5 billion into universities over four years through
the replacement of the traditional block funding grants with a
new commonwealth scheme. But university vice-chancellors have
criticised the lack of detail provided in the budget and it remains
unclear whether this is new government money or simply a re-shuffling
of existing funding. Furthermore, about half of the promised $1.5
billion is tied to workplace and administration reforms. For example,
$404 million in government money is contingent on universities
agreeing to implement industrial reforms, including measures to
push academics into individual employment contracts.
According to a recent article in Melbournes Age
newspaper, the plan offers no additional public resources for
universities. The newspaper reported that government funding for
higher education in Australia fell from 0.9 percent of GDP in
1996 to 0.6 percent at present and is set to contract as
a proportion of GDP to 0.5 percent in 2003-4 and 2004-5.
The Age calculates that an additional $3 billion a year
is required to lift state spending on tertiary education back
to 1996 levels.
Other reports refute government claims that fee increases have
not affected student enrolments. According to a study by Bob Birrell
from Monash University, the number of full-time undergraduates
aged 19 who were eligible to receive a youth allowance had dropped
by one-third between 1998 and 2001. Birrell said this indicated
a dramatic decline in the number of young students from low-income
families being able to access higher education.
Last week, the Labor Party opposition accused the federal government
of suppressing a report revealing a significant drop in the number
of disadvantaged students attending university since fees were
increased. The 600-page report, according to the Sydney Morning
Herald, showed fewer students enrolling in the most expensive
courses: medicine, veterinary science, law and dentistry.
Although the federal budget freezes fees for some university
courses, such as nursing and teaching, and a small number of scholarships
are provided for the disadvantaged as an added sop, it is inevitable
that cash-starved universities will impose substantial fee rises
in all other areas. Increasingly, access to higher education will
be denied to the vast majority of students marginalising growing
layers of young people.
A two-tier system
Three decades after the Labor and Liberal governments began
their wrecking operation against state funding of universities,
the poor state of higher education is now being utilised as an
argument for the scrapping of universal provision and the creation
of a two-tier higher education system.
The best-placed universities are being given a green light
to operate according to market dictates. High fees will be charged
for the popular courses, i.e., those leading to a
career in higher paying professions. In fact, Alan Gilbert, vice-chancellor
of one of Australias leading universities, has already announced
that the University of Melbourne would be charging domestic undergraduates
$150,000 for its six-year medicine degree.
Universities unable to attract wealthier students will be relegated
to second-class status and forced to compete for a declining share
of state-funded student places. Already, the vice-chancellor of
the University of Western Sydney, in which a high proportion of
working-class students is enrolled, has announced the university
will be $300,000 worse off in the first year of the governments
new funding scheme.
Whole departments in areas such as philosophy and history will
be sacrificed on the altar of profitability and lead to a further
deterioration in the general level of education and culture. This
trend is already well underway, according to University of Melbourne
Professor of Mathematics Hyam Rubinstein in a submission to Brendan
Nelson during the ministers yearlong higher-education review.
Rubinstein pointed out that of the 16 positions for professors
of mathematics and statistics in Melbournes three universities,
10 were vacant. Only three of these positions would be filled
and the remaining seven lost, he warned.
While Labor and the minor parties have vowed to block the passage
of the governments legislation in the Senate, in reality,
Nelson has been able to advance his package because neither of
these organisations nor the education unions are in fundamental
disagreement with the direction of Howards free market
agenda and therefore cannot launch a genuine challenge to Nelsons
reforms.
On the other hand, there is a deep-seated opposition by ordinary
people to the governments agenda. This opposition, although
unable at this point to find any means of expression, nevertheless
has explosive consequences. A glimpse of this was provided in
a March opinion poll that put education at the top of Australians
priority list, above health and way ahead of defence.
Another was provided by federal Parliamentary Secretary for
Family and Community Services, Ross Cameron in an astonishing
public outburst. Cameron lashed out at people who expected free
medical care and education and said they made him want to
throw up. Claiming that the government had increased spending
on education and health, Cameron said he had been sickened by
the debate over the governments federal budget. He admitted,
however, that the higher-education measures could damage the government,
adding, There are a number of areas in Australian life where
there is a gulf between community expectations and the capacity
of government to deliver.
See Also:
Australian government prepares
to further de-regulate higher education system
[3 April 2003]
Australia: New education
minister launches higher education review
[12 June 2002]
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