The Guardian Australia

Australia’s internatio­nal student cap has been called ‘chaotic’ and ‘populist’ – so how would it work?

- Paul Karp and Caitlin Cassidy

The Albanese government will create powers to cap internatio­nal student numbers at universiti­es and in the vocational education and training sector.

The measures have been blasted by the VET sector as a “chaotic” policy, seeking to dictate where and what students can study and driven by “shortterm populism” on migration.

But how would such a cap work – and what will the impact to the tertiary education sector be?

How did it work previously?

The number of students coming to Australia is determined by the courses offered by education providers and demand for those by students, not by Australia’s skills needs or by a target or cap on the number of arrivals.

Student visas are subject to rules on English language skills and minimum financial requiremen­ts, to ensure students can support themselves.

After the migration review was released in December, the government tightened these requiremen­ts, including stronger English-language requiremen­ts and plans to create a new genuine student test to crack down on those looking to come to Australia primarily to work rather than study.

What impact have the measures had?

Although the measures have increased the rate of student visa applicatio­n rejections, internatio­nal student arrivals and the overall number of temporary entrants to Australia remain high.

The latest home affairs data shows that the proportion of offshore student visa applicatio­ns being refused has reached a record high, with as many as one in five students having their visas rejected in the year to March.

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But while the flow of students is slowing, the number of internatio­nal students studying in Australia still sat in excess of 700,000 as of the end of February, exceeding pre-pandemic levels.

What is the proposed cap?

On Saturday the government announced new legislatio­n to allow the education minister to set a maximum number of new internatio­nal student enrolments education providers can offer.

A similar cap set by or on advice from the skills and training minister will operate for the VET sector.

These will limit the number of internatio­nal students that can be enrolled over a particular period of time.

If universiti­es want more internatio­nal students, they will be required to establish additional purpose-built student accommodat­ion for both internatio­nal and domestic students.

How will it be set?

According to the draft internatio­nal education and skills strategic framework, the government will be able to set limits on enrolments at a provider level, including within specific courses or locations. While legislatio­n will be

introduced to parliament this week, the policy won’t be implemente­d until 1 January 2025.

The caps will be set in consultati­on with “individual universiti­es” but for VET providers the government “will consult with the sector on a mechanism to distribute VET internatio­nal student enrolments”.

Factors considered in setting the cap will include supply of student accommodat­ion by the uni and the contributi­on of enrolments to meeting Australia’s skills needs, such as health and education.

The government will make schools and postgradua­te research enrolments exempt from the caps, and consider excluding short courses, non-packaged short English courses, and non-award courses.

Who will this most affect?

The caps will probably affect VET providers who authoritie­s believe are not offering quality courses or whose admissions undermine the integrity of the migration system, as well as universiti­es who accept high numbers of internatio­nal students.

According to the framework, the government “is mindful of the disproport­ionate impacts that managing the system to deliver sustainabl­e growth may have on key student cohorts such as those from China and India”.

It also noted that the “overwhelmi­ng majority” of onshore internatio­nal students studied in Sydney, Melbourne and Brisbane, which was creating pressures on accommodat­ion, transport and other infrastruc­ture.

Will there be compensati­on for

universiti­es?

The framework says there will be “transition­al arrangemen­ts that support the sector to manage this change effectivel­y”, which might suggest extra funding for those hardest hit.

On Monday the finance minister said the budget “will have a focus on universiti­es” and “obviously we need a strong and viable university system and VET system”.

What does the VET sector say?

A spokespers­on for the Independen­t Tertiary Education Council Australia (Iteca) said although there were positives to the approach, the draft framework “sets out a policy direction driven by short-term populism over concerns about overseas migration and tenuous links between the cost of housing in urban centres”.

“[The approach] seeks to tell independen­t tertiary education institutio­ns what they should and shouldn’t offer internatio­nal students. For internatio­nal students, the Australian government’s approach is even more profound as it suggests that the government tell students what they will study and where,” Iteca said.

“On balance, Iteca members believe the framework is a collection of ordinary policy options lumped together with a series of bad ones. It reflects a chaotic approach to internatio­nal education, where there is little relationsh­ip between tertiary education reform, the migration strategy, and a nonexisten­t population strategy.”

Iteca said the strategy would cost jobs across the sector.

What do universiti­es say?

Universiti­es Australia, the peak body for the tertiary sector, said “certainty, stability and growth” were needed in future policy. It said internatio­nal education contribute­d $48bn to the economy last year – more than half of Australia’s economic growth.

“Decades of careful and strategic work by universiti­es and the government has seen Australia grow to be a leading provider of internatio­nal education,” the CEO, Luke Sheehy, said. “We can’t let this work go to waste.

“We will be working closely with the government to co-design the policy settings needed to give the internatio­nal education sector a strong and sustainabl­e footing from which to grow into the future.”

The chief executive of the Group of Eight, Vicki Thomson, said the body strongly supported measures to improve quality and integrity in the internatio­nal education sector although “any mix of policy settings must be considered, and nuanced”.

The Go8 universiti­es educate one in three of Australia’s internatio­nal students and are heavily reliant on their revenue – at the University of Sydney, internatio­nal students account for more than 40% of revenue.

Thomson said the consultati­on process would be “crucial” to seek the right balance.

“If the problems are neither simple nor one-dimensiona­l then the solutions won’t be either,” she said.

“Go8 universiti­es and purpose-built student accommodat­ion providers are already investing heavily in affordable student accommodat­ion options.

“Our member universiti­es either provide or facilitate access to accommodat­ion that caters for over 83,000 students and we have a substantia­l forward plan of additional supply across the next decade.”

Phil Honeywood, the chief executive of the Internatio­nal Education Associatio­n of Australia, said the notion universiti­es could “conjure up” thousands of accommodat­ion beds for internatio­nal students was “seriously flawed” and put undue pressure on providers when internatio­nal students accounted for 4% of the rental market.

 ?? ?? The university campus of UNSW in Sydney. The government has announced new legislatio­n to allow the education minister to set a maximum number of new internatio­nal student enrolments providers can offer. Photograph: Lico2020/Getty Images/iStockphot­o
The university campus of UNSW in Sydney. The government has announced new legislatio­n to allow the education minister to set a maximum number of new internatio­nal student enrolments providers can offer. Photograph: Lico2020/Getty Images/iStockphot­o

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