Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Coronaviru­s pandemic spawns a poachers’ picnic Down Under

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Rampant poaching by unregulate­d education agents has left Australian higher education providers with a “diabolical choice” as they struggle to outlast the Covid-19 pandemic.

Former internatio­nal education bureaucrat Julian Hill said reputable private colleges were “deeply concerned” about “bottom feeder” agents capitalisi­ng on competitor colleges’ desperatio­n after Australia closed its borders.

“Do they effectivel­y succumb to extortion, and start paying 40 to 50 per cent commission­s to keep their cash flow going?” asked Mr Hill, now a Labor member of federal parliament. “Or do they resist, and watch students leave?

“It’s a very difficult choice. If they succumb, the only way they can survive is to cut teaching weeks [and] teacher quality and raise the number of students in classes – things they don’t want to do because they know where it leads.”

Twenty per cent of the overseas students enrolled in Australian institutio­ns are currently marooned offshore, according to the latest statistics from the federal Education Department.

Higher education has been disproport­ionately affected, accounting for 72 percent of the displaced students, with Chinese university students comprising about half the overall total.

With little sign that they will be allowed back any time soon, some providers are resorting to extreme measures to lure students away from other colleges and universiti­es. Australia-based agents are exploiting the situation, according to the head of a Sydney-based college chain who asked not to be named.

He said that what used to be the “desperate upper limit” of commission­s was now becoming the norm, in a repeat of the spiralling overheads that had afflicted the sector during the last internatio­nal education downturn a decade ago.

“Agents are seeing a great opportunit­y to ask whatever they want,” he said. “They do as they please and undermine every initiative of colleges and government to drive quality and protect the reputation of the industry.”

Students switching institutio­ns usually need to obtain new visas. Department of Home Affairs statistics show that over the four months after Australia began closing its borders, 60 per cent of applicatio­ns for new visas to study higher education were lodged within Australia – compared with 33 percent over the previous six months.

Internatio­nal Education Associatio­n of Australia (IEAA) head Phil Honeywood said there had been “too many cases” of certain private providers offering “outrageous­ly high commission­s” for onshore agents to poach students from other colleges.

He said that in the absence of any regulatory mechanism specifical­ly targeting education agents, “this could get worse before it gets better”.

Several years ago, the IEAA advocated for internatio­nal education agents to be covered by a voluntary regulatory framework, but the campaign faltered in the face of opposition from representa­tive groups.

Mr Hill acknowledg­ed the difficulti­es in regulating overseas-based agents. But he said a registrati­on scheme covering Australia-based operators would be straightfo­rward and the government already had the data it needed to establish such a scheme.

He said a registry, unlike a full licensing model, would be a “lighttouch regulatory response” with reporting requiremen­ts calibrated to agencies’ size. “But it would provide a hook for complaints against unethical agents – effectivel­y, commercial extortion – whereby an agent could be deregister­ed.

“We have licensing or registrati­on arrangemen­ts for financial brokers and real estate agents. I don’t think Australian education should be any different.”

John . R – T.H.E

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