HECS overhaul urged
Government mulls proposals for ‘simpler, fairer’ system
A major shake-up of the student loan scheme is being considered as the Albanese government finalises the next budget, after the biggest review of Australia’s higher education system in 15 years called for significant reforms.
The Universities Accord review, released on Sunday, has called on the federal government to double the number of university places by 2050, reduce the fees for certain subjects and increase the country’s tertiary education attainment rate from 60 per cent to 80 per cent over the next 25 years. The review, conducted by former NSW chief scientist Mary O’Kane has called for the need for “significant change”, warning “small reforms … won’t be enough”.
Ms O’Kane urged reforms to the HECS system to ease the impact high inflation has on repayments, and recommended the lending practice of banks be reviewed so one’s HECS debt does not factor into home loan borrowing capacity.
Education Minister Jason Clare said the government was considering the report’s 47 recommendations, including to make changes to the HELP scheme, formally known as HECS. “The report says HECS has to be simpler and fairer,” he told ABC’s Insiders.
“Bruce Chapman, the architect of HECS, has helped the panel with a recommendation which says there are ways to reduce upfront payments for people on lower incomes … someone on an income of $75,000 would pay about $1000 less every year ... something that could provide people with immediate cost-ofliving benefit once they finish uni and are in the workforce.”
The government will also consider the recommendation to tie indexation to the wage price index, rather than CPI.
Mr Clare said he would put a few proposals to the expenditure review committee but signalled the work needed to reform the higher education system would take years.
“This is bigger than one budget, but we do need to get started now to build the foundations for long-term reform,” he said. “I hope (there will be something in the budget).”
The review outlines “ambitious” targets including increasing the proportion of university-educated Australians aged 25 to 34 from 45 per cent to 55 per cent by 2050, and the broader tertiary education attainment rate from the current 60 per cent to 80 per cent by mid-century.
To achieve this increase, the government would need to double the number of Commonwealth-supported students at university from 860,000 to 1.8 million by 2050.