The Guardian Australia

Australian universiti­es brace for ‘ugly’ 2022 after budget cuts

- Naaman Zhou

Australia’s higher education sector is bracing for an “ugly” 2022 after budget cuts to universiti­es and Tafe funding that critics warn will result in job losses, poorer course quality and less research in medicine and technology.

Tuesday’s federal budget reduced funding for universiti­es by nearly 10% over the next three years, while Tafe funding will be slashed by 24%. That’s despite universiti­es stressing before the budget that the bushfire and Covid crises had highlighte­d the importance of government funding for research.

An emergency $1bn grant for research, handed to universiti­es last year during the peak of the pandemic, was not renewed in this year’s budget. And the budget’s assumption that internatio­nal borders will remain closed until mid-2022 means university finances “will get worse” in the meantime, according to Universiti­es Australia.

A higher education expert, Andrew Norton, from the Australian National University, said the entire package meant “2022 will be ugly”.

According to Tuesday’s budget, total government funding for higher education will “decrease by 8.3% in real terms” between this financial year and next year, and “decrease by 9.3% in real terms from 2021-22 to 2024-25”.

Funding will drop by $741m next financial year, from $11.37bn in 2020-21 to $10.63bn in 2021-22, before a further $387m reduction the year after

Australian universiti­es lost and continue to lose billions of dollars in revenue due to border closures, and public universiti­es were excluded from jobkeeper during the pandemic after the government made a series of rule changes to the program.

The vice-chancellor of the Australian

National University, Prof Brian Schmidt, said universiti­es had “been left to bleed” in what was one of history’s biggest spending budgets for other parts of society.

“There is nothing of note for our universiti­es, except for $1.1m to support industry PhDs and additional flexibilit­y for student visa holders when it comes to working hours,” he wrote for Guardian Australia. “This is not only a real shame but a missed opportunit­y; universiti­es are vital to our future prosperity.”

Meanwhile, total funding for vocational education will drop 10.8% next year, and another 24.2% between 2021-22 and 2024-25.

The federal Greens senator Me

hreen Faruqi, a former academic and environmen­tal engineer, said the budget was abandoning Tafe and universiti­es.

“How can we expect to rebuild with this government hellbent on decimating teaching and research?” she told Guardian Australia.

Faruqi also said the government was moving funds away from public Tafe and “piling more money” into forprofit private vocational education.

“The government has just committed another $500 million for the JobTrainer scheme which will mostly go to for-profit training providers,” she said. “This scheme has had a take-up well below the government’s expectatio­ns and yet they keep throwing money at it anyway.

Victoria’s minister for higher education, Gayle Tierney, said the budget “deliberate­ly ignores Tafe and public providers”.

“Tafe … should be at the heart of any good government’s agenda,” she said. “A continued lack of investment will mean more staff cuts and potential campus closures.”

Last year more than 17,000 people were estimated to have lost their jobs at Australian universiti­es, roughly 13% of Australia’s pre-Covid university workforce.

Labor’s shadow education minister, Tanya Plibersek, said thousands more jobs would be lost as a result of Tuesday’s budget.

“Universiti­es have been brought to their knees, and instead of using this budget to help them Scott Morrison has stuck the knife in,” she said. “If he really cared about keeping Australian jobs, he would be helping universiti­es, not hurting them.”

The chief executive of Universiti­es Australia, Catriona Jackson, said on Tuesday night that the budget’s assumption that borders would remain closed until mid-2022 posed a “very serious challenge”.

“The sector took a $1.8bn revenue hit last year,” she said. “Universiti­es Australia estimates another $2bn will be lost this year.

“Government­s across all jurisdicti­ons need to come together with universiti­es to develop a robust plan for the safe return of internatio­nal students. The plan would mean the safe quarantine of students from low-risk countries.

“Australia’s university sector cannot sustain these losses without serious damage to national productivi­ty and the country’s knowledge base.”

Tuesday’s budget also announced an additional $30,000 in funding for every PhD student who signs up to a three-month industry internship after they enrol, and $26.1m total for 5,000 extra short course places at nonunivers­ity higher education providers in semester 2 of this year.

The government has also pledged $17.7m to extend “regulatory fee relief” for a range of quality oversight bodies, and $9.4m for an “innovation fund for private higher education and English Language Intensive Courses for Overseas Students”.

 ?? Photograph: The Sydney Morning Herald/Getty Images ?? Budget cuts to universiti­es will result in more job losses and less research, critics say.
Photograph: The Sydney Morning Herald/Getty Images Budget cuts to universiti­es will result in more job losses and less research, critics say.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia