Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Australian internatio­nal education ‘a cheap fix’

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Australia’s government could inexpensiv­ely breathe life back into its fourth-biggest export industry, according to opposition MP and former internatio­nal education bureaucrat Julian Hill.

Mr Hill said internatio­nal education could be revived for a fraction of the money Canberra had spent to bail out aviation and tourism. “The effort involved here is far less for much greater return,” he told THE.

“In purely mercenary economic terms, they can save thousands more jobs with some simple policy-led actions that don’t cost a fortune.”

Internatio­nal education earned Australia A$40.4 billion (£20.8 billion) in 2019, making it the country’s fourth-biggest export after iron ore, coal and gas. The industry supports “upward of 250,000 jobs”, according to federal education minister Dan Tehan, yet it is bedevilled by policy uncertaint y. The Home Aff a i r s Department has stopped processing many applicatio­ns for student visas because of coronaviru­s-related logistical difficulti­es, it is not granting automatic visa extensions to foreign students whose studies have been disrupted by the pandemic and it refuses to clarify whether students forced to study online will qualify for post-graduation work rights.

Mr Hill said internatio­nal education was the only top-10 export that had attracted “no serious help or policy attention” from the government. “There’s been no collegiate effort to get the relevant ministries, agencies, providers and students around the table to nut out solutions to these problems.”

Mr Hill spent three years as executive director of internatio­nal education in the Victorian state government before his election to federal parliament, where he now cochairs the Parliament­ary Friends of Internatio­nal Education support group. He said the visa processing problems the government faced were real, but the answer was to “sit down with a solution mindset and find a way through”.

“I was a senior bureaucrat,” he said. “I have dealt with crises before. The first thing you do is get everyone around the table and look at how to solve the problems.”

The federal government has alienated internatio­nal students by excluding them from financial support packages to combat the pandemic’s effects, while prime minister Scott Morrison said foreign students unable to support themselves should simply go home. But THE understand­s that Mr Tehan and population minister Alan Tudge have been working behind the scenes to support the industry.

Reforms to boost visa flexibilit­y may emerge within days, while New South Wales – the only state that has not yet unveiled a hardship fund for internatio­nal students – is understood to be addressing the issue this week. “The government will consider what additional support may be required to complement assistance already being provided by universiti­es in NSW and the commonweal­th,” said a spokesman for state treasurer Dominic Perrottet.

Mr Hill said the industry’s problems could be alleviated by clarifying post-study work rights, extending visas and introducin­g flexible enrolment conditions.

He said a senior minister – ideally Mr Tehan, who had endeavoure­d to be “positive and sensitive” – should be appointed to “coordinate the recovery” at the federal level.

Overseas students forced home during the crisis should be assured that they could continue their studies online and return next year “without penalty for breaching visa or enrolment conditions”. Those experienci­ng hardship in Australia should be allowed to convert to part-time study temporaril­y, “to reduce financial stress and free up tuition fees for living expenses”, he added.

John Ross

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