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WSWS : News
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University education in Australia and the impact of free
market reform
By an ISSE correspondent
22 August 2007
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A series of free market reforms to the Australian
university system, implemented in the past two decades by successive
Labor and Liberal governments, has exposed all but the most privileged
layers of the student population to increasingly dire social and
financial circumstances.
More than thirty years ago, in 1974, university tuition fees
were abolished under the Whitlam Labor government. This was the
high-point of the period of post-World War II social reforms,
when governments in all the advanced capitalist countries made
a series of concessions to the working class. But by the late
1970s that period had come to an end. From 1983 to 1996, the Hawke-Keating
Labor governments, like their counterparts internationally, mounted
a series of assaults on the social position of the working class,
reversing the previous gains won by the political and industrial
struggles of former generations.
The Labor Partys attack on the right to a free education
was bound up with its response to the transformation in world
economythe globalisation of production and the collapse
of all programs based on national regulation and social reform.
In 1989, former Prime Minister Bob Hawke reintroduced student
fees for tertiary education as part of its agenda of economic
deregulation, privatisation and restructuring, through
which Labor presided over an unprecedented redistribution of wealth
from the working class to the super-rich. Since taking office
in 1996, the Howard government has continued this agenda.
Any even verbal adherence to the conception that every capable
young person, irrespective of their own or their parents
financial situation, should have the right to free and high-quality
tertiary education, and the ability to develop their intellectual,
artistic, and political interests in collaboration with fellow
students on campus, has by now been thoroughly repudiated by the
entire political establishment.
Fees and student debt
Eighteen years after its inception, the Higher Education Contribution
Scheme (HECS)the system of government-sponsored student
loanshas become a major factor in the financial distress
suffered by millions of students and ex- students.
Most of Australias universities are public, and each
one establishes tuition fees for the courses it offers within
limits set by the government. For eligible domestic Australian
students, the federal government pays a portion of this amount.
The student can then elect to pay the remainder upfront or, as
the vast majority are obliged to do, defer it as a HECS loan.
Repayments are then automatically deducted from wages at an indexed
rate once the student commences full-time work.
HECS fees have been ratcheted up every year since they were
introduced. Between 1989 and 1996, repayments climbed from $1,800
to $2,454 per year for all university courses. The Howard government
then increased the fees further, also introducing differential
payment rates for different university courses. A humanities course
now costs $4,996 per year, science or computing $7,118, and law
or medicine $8,333.
This means that the HECS debt for a student undertaking a basic
three-year humanities degree is almost $15,000. Students undertaking
longer, professional courses, graduate programs or second degrees,
face debts tens of thousands of dollars higher.
From 1989 through to June 2003, more than 1.7 million students
took out HECS loans amounting to around $13 billion. Total debt
is growing by $2 billion a year and is predicted to reach $18
billion by 2008-2009. This extraordinary increase in student indebtedness
is having a long-lasting impact. According to an article published
in the Australian on September 20 last year, only one-third
of all HECS-incurring graduates have repaid their loans in full.
User Pays
As part of its user pays education model, the Howard
government has promoted an influx of full-fee paying students.
The 2007 federal budget, for example, lifted all limits on the
numbers of full fee-paying domestic students that universities
can enrol once their quota of government-subsidised places is
filled.
The budget also allowed university administrations to increase
HECS fees by another 15 percent for a range of courses. At the
same time, universities will no longer be penalised for over-enrolling
students, opening the way for attacks on the quality of university
education.
Underlying these changes are huge cuts to federal tertiary
education funding. Whereas in 1995 federal government grants contributed
57.2 percent of universities operating revenue, a decade
later they had declined to just 41 percent. By contrast, fees
and charges made up 11 percent in 1995, compared to more than
23 percent in 2005.
Overseas university students, who are denied access to HECS
and must pay upfront fees, are being increasingly exploited as
a source of revenue by university administrations, themselves
starved of government funding.
According to the last available figures, in 2005 there were
240,000 overseas students in Australia, comprising nearly a quarter
of the total student population. Annual tuition fees for international
students averaged $14,378nearly three times higher than
those for domestic students.
Restricted government support
That so many students have to resort to desperate measures
in order to survive during semester is a direct consequence of
the restrictions placed on public income assistance.
International students are ineligible for any form of government
financial support, and the Howard government has severely restricted
domestic students access to Youth Allowance and Austudythe
two main sources of student income support. Payments are now subject
to stringent means and assets tests, including assessing the parents
of students.
According to the National Union of Students, while one third
of Australian teenage full-time students received Youth Allowance
in 1998, only one in five was paid the benefit in 2001.
Total recipients of Youth Allowance dropped by 30,000 from
305,000 students in 2002-3 to 274,000 students in 2005-6.
Even those who do qualify find that assistance payments are
grossly inadequate. For a student aged over eighteen living away
from home, the full amount available from Youth Allowance, with
additional rent assistance, is currently $226 per week. By contrast,
the official poverty line for a single working person without
children for the March 2007 quarter was set at $352 per week.
In Sydney, for example, the cost of renting a single room in a
house or apartment anywhere near one of the citys two major
universities is at least $150 per week.
Vast numbers of students are being forced to use credit cards
and other forms of high-interest loans to finance everyday living
costs such as housing, transport, textbooks, computers and other
necessities. About one in four students in 2006 took out a repayable
loan (other than HECS), with the average debt being $4,720. This
represented an increase of 14 percent over the number of students
taking out loans in 2000, and their loans were, on average, $700
higher over the same period.
Students and the working class
Many students have been forced to undertake paid work alongside
their studies. Seven in every ten students are now in paid employment
during university semestersa fifty percent increase since
1984. Employed full-time students work an average of 14.5 hours
a week during semester, a three-fold increase since 1984.
Students now form a significant component of the Australian
working class. In 2006, 65.9 percent of all full-time studentsthat
is, nearly two-thirdsobtained their total income from paid
employment. In 2000, the equivalent figure was 51 percent.
Financial insecurity, and the time required to work and travel,
have a direct impact upon a students ability to study and
engage with university life.
*According to a recent study, about 12 percent of university
students now regularly go without food or other necessities because
they cannot afford them. In 2006, more than 20 percent of full-time
students indicated that they regularly missed classes
in order to go to work. Forty percent said that paid work adversely
affected their studies, up from fifteen percent only six years
earlier.
*Two out of three part-time students last
year reported they would study full time if they could afford
to. Approximately half were in full time employment during semester,
with another 37 percent employed part time or casually. More than
half agreed that work adversely affected their studies, up from
one-quarter in 2000. The proportion of part-time students who
said they regularly missed classes to attend paid employment more
than doubled from 18.1 percent in 2000 to 37.4 percent in 2007.
*In some respects, postgraduate students are
faring worse than their undergraduate counterparts. Eighty percent
of their average income of just under $20,000 is earned from paid
employment. Even those who receive scholarships or are given campus
employment (37.4 percent of postgraduates) receive only $26,000
on average. One-quarter regularly skipped classes because they
needed to go to work, and almost 50 percent of full time postgraduate
students doing their studies by coursework were dependant on their
parents or partner.
*Indigenous students worked more on average
than their non-indigenous counterparts. They were also more likely
to have taken out a loan for a higher amount in order to study,
relied more on scholarships, government assistance, and services
provided by student organisations, and expressed greater worry
about their financial situation in comparison to the rest of the
student population. Indigenous undergraduate and postgraduate
students were also more likely to regularly miss class to attend
paid employment. Some 25 percent of Aboriginal students regularly
goes without food or other necessities because they cannot afford
them.
*Ten percent of full-time students with dependent children
are now likely to regularly miss classes because they cannot afford
childcare, more than twice as many as in 2000.
These immense financial pressures are just one aspect of a
broader social crisis in Australia and internationally, characterised
by escalating social inequality and a sustained attack on the
living conditions of working people.
The defence of the right to a genuine quality education, comprising
the right to fully participate in all aspects of student life,
can only take place on the basis of an alternative, international
socialist perspectiveone that begins with fulfilling the
needs and rights of the vast majority of ordinary working and
young people, not the profits of a tiny minority.
Education at the primary, secondary, and tertiary levels should
be free and accessible to all who wish to study. Moreover, all
university students, whatever their background or country of origin,
should have the right to a guaranteed social income, allowing
them to concentrate on their studies and engage fully in campus
life without being forced to work. This is the perspective of
the International Students for Social Equality (ISSE).
See Also:
International Students
for Social Equality
Australia: ISSE holds meetings at New South Wales campuses
[7 March 2007]
Join the International Students
for Social Equality! Build an ISSE chapter at your college or
high school!
[19 February 2007]
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