Otago Daily Times

Tertiary sector hopes for Budget boost

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WELLINGTON: Tertiary institutio­ns hope Labour’s first Budget will deliver some financial relief after a decade of austerity but National says there will not be any money left in the coffers once the Government forks out for its zero fees policy.

Tertiary Education Union president Sandra Grey said tertiary education spending was $3.7 billion short of where it should be.

‘‘That has real world impacts,’’ she said.

‘‘We’ve had 130 reviews or so in the last year of programmes of teaching, of libraries of support services and we’ve seen cuts to services, cuts to teaching, cuts to where we’ll deliver.’’

During its three terms, the National government increased student subsidies for a small number of subjects but delivered minimal or no increases to most others, while telling the sector to enrol more foreign students if it wanted more money.

It also reduced or cut access to loans and allowances for postgradua­te and older students.

Education minister Chris Hipkins said the future of the sector was probably one of the biggest challenges facing the Government.

‘‘It’s not just a case of saying, ‘Oh well, gosh, we’ll put some more money into that and then we’ll solve the problem.’ It won’t.’’

Ms Grey said she did not ‘‘expect much for tertiary’’.

‘‘I think they’ve already spent it, and in an area where they’re not really getting results for it, either.’’

Ms Grey said it was time for the Government to begin the process of restoring tertiary education funding.

‘‘We don’t have a lot of hope that this is going to be the Budget that actually turns things around, but we want a signal that this Government has a real plan for how we make sure that all Kiwis have access to the things we need, like a tertiary education.’’

Institutes of technology and polytechni­cs were particular­ly hard hit by a combinatio­n of a downturn in enrolments and the lack of government funding.

New Zealand Institutes of Technology and Polytechni­cs spokesman Charles Finny said a funding increase would be welcome.

‘‘Certainly funding has not kept pace with costs,’’ he said.

Universiti­es New Zealand chief executive Chris Whelan said the decline in funding had

contribute­d to universiti­es’ steady drop in internatio­nal ranking tables.

‘‘We’re starting to see a real pressure on the New Zealand university system just to maintain quality.’’

New Zealand of Union of Students’ Associatio­ns president Jonathan Gee hoped the budget would include further spending in areas ‘‘such as the lack of a postgradua­te allowance . . . age discrimina­tion placed on those over 40 in terms of the student allowance, and loan living costs, as well.’’ — RNZ

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