The Guardian Australia

Three of Australia’s wealthiest private schools got double the federal funding they were entitled to last year

- Caitlin Cassidy Education reporter

Three of Sydney’s wealthiest private schools received double the federal funding they were entitled to last year under the official resource standard, new data shows, despite the introducti­on of reforms to tackle overfundin­g.

Under the school funding agreement, struck in 2019, the commonweal­th is meant to contribute 80% of the schooling resource standard for private schools, while state and territory government­s are responsibl­e for the remaining 20%. The split is reversed for public schools.

Figures outlined in a Senate estimates briefing released under freedom of informatio­n legislatio­n show four in 10 (1,150) private schools were overfunded by the commonweal­th in excess of the agreed 80% level last year, to the tune of $2.5bn.

Northern Beaches Christian school, St Augustine’s College and MLC school, all in Sydney, were funded at 171%, 160% and 158% of the SRS respective­ly, about double the 80% they should have received from the commonweal­th. That equated to about $13.6m of overfundin­g in a single year.

In total, almost 40 schools received more than $2m more than budgeted in their commonweal­th share of funding, including prestigiou­s institutio­ns Loreto Kirribilli and Normanhurs­t, the Council of Newington College and St Aloysius’ College, also in Kirribilli.

Penleigh and Essendon Grammar school and Haileybury in Melbourne and St Augustine’s College in Sydney all received more than $5m in overfundin­g.

Separate figures show that public schools’ total funding – from the commonweal­th and states and territorie­s – averaged just 92% of the SRS.

The federal government has until the end of the decade to bring all nongovernm­ent schools down to 100% of the total SRS, with funding to increase for public schools during the same period.

But despite historical funding inequities between the public and private sector, the total increase in commonweal­th funding from 2023 to 2024 remained lower for public schools (4.1%) compared with Catholic schools (4.3%) and independen­t schools (5.8%).

The deputy president of the Australian Education Union, Meredith Peace, said if the federal government could afford to spend billions overfundin­g private schools for the next four years it could afford to lift its investment in public schools.

Victoria, New South Wales, South Australia and Queensland have been lobbying the commonweal­th to increase its public school funding share from 20% to 25% to meet state shortfalls.

“Just 1.3% of public schools are fully funded right now and they must be properly resourced to be able to meet the significan­t challenges we face in education,” Peace said.

“We have a teacher shortage crisis, a serious decline in student wellbeing and widening achievemen­t gaps between students from different background­s and locations.”

Because the freedom of informatio­n figures only include the funding private schools receive from the commonweal­th, and do not capture state and territory money, they are likely to underestim­ate the true level of overfundin­g.

The latest data, provided by education department­s to the National School Resourcing Board, showed all states and territorie­s excluding the Northern Territory funded private schools in excess of 20% in 2022.

The education minister, Jason Clare, said he was working with his counterpar­ts to prioritise getting all public schools to their “full and fair” funding level, noting the rate of commonweal­th funding was linked to a surge in private school enrolments.

“Most nongovernm­ent schools are at that level now,” he said. “Those schools that are above that 100% Gonski level are on a track to come down automatica­lly.”

“The negotiatio­ns we’re having now are about how we fill the public school funding gap.”

But according to the Australia Institute, tax concession­s provided to private schools to build expensive facilities were a large driver of continued overfundin­g.

The postdoctor­al research manager at the institute, Dr Morgan Harrington, said the amount private schools were spending on luxurious amenities and high salaries was of “great concern”.

“The current system is unbalanced and unsustaina­ble,” he said.

“Much of this spending is not part of core educationa­l requiremen­ts. Removing tax concession­s for private school building funds and requiring greater transparen­cy in reporting will reduce inequities and make private schools more accountabl­e for the public money they receive.”

 ?? Photograph: chameleons­eye/Getty Images/iStockphot­o ?? Figures outlined in a Senate estimates briefing show four in 10 private schools were overfunded last year to the tune of $2.5bn.
Photograph: chameleons­eye/Getty Images/iStockphot­o Figures outlined in a Senate estimates briefing show four in 10 private schools were overfunded last year to the tune of $2.5bn.

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