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Zealand
New Zealand student debt levels reach $10 billion mark
By John Braddock and Chris Ross
13 May 2008
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Last month, a national day of action was held in
New Zealand to mark a new milestone: New Zealands collective
student debt has reached $NZ10 billion. Demonstrations and other
events took place in many of the countrys main centres and
on tertiary campuses.
Student debt has sharply escalated under the Labour government.
The most recent NZUSA Student Income & Expenditure Survey
(2007) identified significant increases in students living
costs and indebtedness, with average debt rising 54 percent since
the survey was last conducted in 2004, and now topping $28,838
per person.
In 2000, Prime Minister Clarks first year in office,
total indebtednessafter nearly a decade of the student loan
schemes operationstood at $3 billion. Since then it
has risen by a massive $1 billion per annum. In the same year,
the average level of debt was $10,600. It is now nearly three
times that. It is not unusual for students in courses with higher
fees, such as dentistry, veterinary science and medicine, to accumulate
debts of nearly $100,000 by the time they complete their studies.
Notwithstanding a temporary fee freeze in 2001-2003, Labour
has presided over continual fee rises. While the rate of increase
has declined since the 1990s, universities routinely raise fees
by the 5 percent annual maximum that Labours policies allow,
and some apply for and receive exemptions to allow for increases
of as much as 10 percent. Fees for a typical undergraduate program
range between about $4,000 per annum for a first degree through
to nearly $12,000 a year in medicine. Books, materials and living
costs are all extra.
The present situation is the outcome of the prolonged assault
on public education, begun by the Lange-Douglas Labour government
in the 1980s, then pursued by governments of all stripes. Under
Labour in 1989, tertiary education was shifted onto a market footing,
along with the imposition of flat-rate fees. University administration
was devolved from government responsibility through the establishment
of governing boards based on the private sector, and given wide
powers of financial control, hiring and firing staff, investment
and fundraising. Funding was provided not according to need, but
through a formula based on student numbers.
Since then, continuous cutbacks in government financing have
forced university administrations to impose and constantly ratchet
up student fees and to seek sponsorship from big business. In
1991, the National government introduced the student loan system
and allowed tertiary institutions to set their own level of fees.
This saw fees rise by an average 13 percent through the 1990s,
while government funding fell from nearly three-quarters of operating
revenue to only 50 percent.
The impact on students has been severe. With only limited access
to living allowances, a majority of students are forced into dependence
on parents or part-time employment. Allowances are based on parental
income, regardless of whether students live at home. Rates of
payment can vary between $25 dollars a week to approximately $200
per week, with the ceiling for eligibility reached when combined
parental income hits just $71,280.
Working class students are particularly disadvantaged because
they inevitably have to borrow more, and because of the harsh
and onerous repayment conditions. Repayments, which are administered
through the tax system, start when a graduate begins earning just
over $12,000 per year. The repayment rate is set at 10 percent
of income, compared with the Australian loan scheme of between
1 and 4 percent.
Nevertheless, the loan scheme has become the main source of
funding used by students to underwrite course costs and living
expenses. It is not unusual for students to hold jobs while studying
full-time and even turning to food-banks in order to survive.
Every year, more students are forced into higher levels of debt.
Despite making minor changes to the system since assuming office
in 1999, the Labour government has kept it, in all major respects,
intact.
Dead-end protest politics
The purpose of the national protests on April 10, according
to the NZ Union of Students Associations (NZUSA), was to
highlight the inequity of the student-loan scheme and the
unsustainability of a debt-laden generation.
Far from exposing the role of the Clark Labour government,
however, the event revealed the bankrupt role of the various student
associations and middle class radical outfits which,
for nearly 20 years, have used their positions on the campuses
to posture as opponents of the tertiary fees and loans system,
while systematically steering each successive influx of students
into the dead-end of protest politics.
Students and tertiary staff have repeatedly demonstrated their
opposition to a user-pays education system. Yet at
every turn, they have been misled and frustrated by the organic
incapacity of the student leaderships and protest
groups to mount any sustained offensive against these policies
and the parties responsible for them. Despite a panoply of radical
activities involving protest stunts, demonstrations and occupations,
the perspective of applying pressure on university administrations
and the Labour and National parties has been an utter failure.
At the time of a previous national mobilisation
in early 2000, the World Socialist Web Site issued the
following warning; No amount of appeals to the government
for education reforms will resolve the fundamental issues at stake.
One of the lessons that must be learned from the bitter defeats
inflicted on the working class over the past 15 years is that
without an alternative political perspective, the students
movement too will be dissipated and end in disillusionment. There
must be a complete break with the present ...leaderships
(see: New Zealand
students begin nationwide campaign for free state education).
This prognosis has been fully verified. In proportion, as the
blight of indebtedness has worsened over the period of the Labour
government, so the student movement has become increasingly moribund.
This was especially evident on April 10.
The NZUSAs prior advertising of events at the University
of Otago said students would be marking the occasion with
a protest on the registry lawn in the form of a massive birthday
party for the student debt monster. As well as a variety
of party related activities, including free food and
a horizontal bungy, students were invited to register
their protest by completing a birthday card with their name, year
of study, and student loan debt and sending it to the parliamentary
offices of Pete Hodgson, Labours minister for tertiary education.
The perspective underlying these stunts is to subordinate students
to the Clark Labour government, and the utterly exhausted program
of national reformism. Such infantile antics also have a related
purpose: to lower the general intellectual and political level
on campus and repel those students looking for a genuine solution
to the assault on free education, leaving them with no alternative
to the present set-up.
The futility of any program based on appealing to Labour was
underscored by Hodgsons vicious response to the NZUSAs
demands. The lot of the individual student was better
than it was 10 years ago Hodgson declared. Student debt,
he claimed, was rising more slowly than the average wage, and
loan payback times had reduced. According to Hodgson, various
measuresall cosmeticintroduced by Labour since 1999,
such as abolishing interest on loans, had made a difference.
The main reasons for the increase in total debt, Hodgson claimed,
were that more students are accessing education and more
students are studying to a higher level.
Hodgsons arrogant contentions are entirely false. Students
are not better off than they were 10 years ago. Far
from matching the rate of wage increases, the Student Loan Scheme
Annual Report series reveals an increase in the level of student
loans of 18.2 percent over the period 2004-2007. During that time,
according to the NZ income survey, there was an increase in average
weekly incomes for employed people of 16.9 percent.
Contrary to Hodgsons claims, total enrolments at universities
have, in the past year, peaked and begun to decline, particularly
among domestic secondary school graduates.
That students are borrowing more is due to increased living
and tuition costs. According to the Dominion Post, there
are now 500,000 current and former students carrying loans, at
an average level of $16,000. This is growing every year. For many
university graduates, tuition debts are now a crushing burden,
blocking access to a home loan or to starting a family. At the
last count, some 58,000 graduates have simply gone overseas.
Yet in spite of Labours record, the various radical groups
continue directing the opposition of students behind Labor. Speaking
to the rally at parliament, Joel Cosgrove from the pro-Maoist
Workers Party and president of the Victoria University of Wellington
Students Association (VUWSA) called on the Clark government to
show some positive action ... indicating what they plan
to do and the priority they put on it.
Both Cosgrove, and Massey Wellington Students Association president
Alex Sorenson called on students to vote for whatever bourgeois
party they could identify as the most sympathetic to students
in the forthcoming 2008 elections. The rally ended with the speakers
leading protestors in empty chants of Well be back!
The bankrupt perspective of the VUWSA/Workers Party leadership
was further illustrated in the main banners which read: 1991-2008,
I cant believe were still protesting against this
shit; I dont know what were demonstrating
about, I just know that Im poor; and Students
are the only people borrowing to livean indication
of the vast gulf that separates these elements from the conditions
of life affecting the bulk of the working class.
For those students who are serious about taking up the struggle
to defend the right to a free tertiary education for all, it is
critical to begin to advance an alternative perspective. The intensive
assault on public education in New Zealand is intimately bound
up with a pro-market offensive against the working class, which
has been unleashed all over the world during the past two decades.
Education reformsincreasing privatisation, user-pays
systems, funding cutshave been imposed by governments in
every country and of all stripes, driven by the demands of the
financial markets that costs be reduced and international
competitiveness enforced. The Clark Labour government is
no exception.
Only when students begin to turn politically to the working
class, and actively seek to develop an independent political movement
armed with a socialist perspectivethat is one that starts
from the needs and aspirations of ordinary working people, not
the profits of the fewcan the struggle to defend the right
to an education go forward. This is the perspective for which
the International Students for Social Equality fights.
See Also:
New Zealand students
begin nationwide campaign for free state education
[31 May 2000]
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