Rafy
Retired
- Joined
- Sep 30, 2004
- Messages
- 10,719
- Gender
- Female
- HSC
- 2005
- Uni Grad
- 2008
http://www.theage.com.au/news/national/alp-to-cut-fullfee-places/2006/07/20/1153166521719.htmlLABOR has promised to abolish full-fee university places for Australian students, a move that could put it in conflict with universities over funding.
In an overhaul of its higher education policy before next year's federal election, Labor for the first time has offered to compensate universities for scrapping the places, a cost estimated at up to $2 billion.
But with the number of local students willing to pay for their degrees growing rapidly, the level of compensation offered potentially places the Labor Party on a collision course with vice-chancellors.
A Labor higher education discussion paper, to be released today, argues that the fee-paying places are "fundamentally unfair" as better-off students can gain places denied to those with higher marks.
"It has the potential for higher education to become a mechanism for reproducing social stratification, in contrast to its longstanding role in Australia as a means of upward social mobility," the paper states.
Labor took the policy of dumping the local full-fee places to the 2004 election, saying it would fund the idea by increasing university funding.
The plan was widely criticised at the time by Victorian vice-chancellors, who said they would be worse off under the policy. Melbourne University predicted the policy would leave it $100 million worse off over five years.
Earlier this year, The Age reported that full-fee places for local first-year students had surged by up to 80 per cent at Victorian universities.
The Federal Government said this freed government-funded places for other students.
The decision by Labor to scrap the full-fee places, which were introduced by the Howard Government in 1996, is believed to have created tension within the party, with some arguing it will be too expensive.
Opposition education spokeswoman Jenny Macklin said universities would be compensated, and funding to universities would be increased overall.
"I don't think universities should be worse off; they've gone down this (full-fee) track because they are desperate for money," she said. "Privately, many of them would agree that they shouldn't have this mechanism, but 'if it's available I'll have the money, thanks' is their attitude."
Full-fee places, which can cost more than $100,000 for some degrees, do not take the place of HECS places. Local fee-paying students comprise about 3 per cent of domestic undergraduates.
Ms Macklin said the policy paper put forward options to lower the financial burdens on students caused by the doubling of HECS charges over the past decade.
It proposes lowering the cost of degrees in skill-shortage areas such as accounting, mathematics, engineering and agriculture by reducing the HECS charges. At current rates, these courses would generally drop in cost from $6979 to $4899 a year.
Labor is also considering paying part of or all the HECS debts of students if they work in areas of skills shortages and/or in country areas.
The so-called "HECS debt remissions" would apply to graduate nurses and doctors in rural or remote areas, high school maths and science teachers and teachers in disadvantaged schools.
Labor has lost the plot.