The Saturday Paper

The end of the university boom

Internatio­nal students created a gold rush for higher education in Australia, but in the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic, universiti­es will need to shrink in order to survive. Margaret Simons reports.

- This article is supported by the Judith Neilson Institute for Journalism and Ideas.

The former Melbourne University vice-chancellor Glyn Davis likes to compare Australian universiti­es to English monasterie­s during the reign of Henry VIII. The monasterie­s, he has written, were independen­t and could challenge the Crown. They also had “serious money”, including vast landholdin­gs and bequests from the faithful.

Henry dissolved the monasterie­s, but he had to move cautiously. These institutio­ns provided employment in country towns, trade and spiritual support. They were influentia­l. The king began the process with surveillan­ce and reports on their operations, “a sort of research assessment exercise”, by Davis’s descriptio­n. The monasterie­s were not helped by excesses and corruption, alleged and actual. Dissolving them gave Henry VIII a windfall, some of which he spent on setting up university colleges, “but most [of it] he squandered on fighting the French”.

The analogy, Davis acknowledg­es, is not exact, but he has used it in a few publicatio­ns to draw attention to the uneasy relations between government and universiti­es.

For their part, government­s want universiti­es to teach and train, and to do research of clear utility to industry. They want them to serve the national interest.

Universiti­es, meanwhile, pride themselves on independen­ce, the pursuit of pure knowledge and the writing of journal articles read only by academic peers. They earn their own money, but also draw on the public purse, tending to regard such funding as both perpetuall­y inadequate and their natural right.

In the past few weeks, in the wake of the Covid-19 crisis, the tensions in this relationsh­ip have been laid bare.

Higher education is one of the sectors hardest hit by the virus crisis, because the internatio­nal students upon whom they have come to depend are no longer able to travel.

Yet the federal government has made it clear there are firm limits to its preparedne­ss to help.

The government has guaranteed the money universiti­es were expecting to be paid for teaching domestic students, even if those enrolments decline. But there will be no bailout.

In particular, the government has repeatedly tweaked the rules to effectivel­y preclude universiti­es from being eligible for the JobKeeper scheme, which would subsidise their biggest cost – staff salaries.

It is not clear what happens to Australia’s universiti­es from here, but this pandemic may well mark the start of the unwinding of one of the nation’s success stories – the growth of internatio­nal university education.

Asked about the crisis enveloping universiti­es, Education Minister Dan Tehan offered something of a backhanded compliment.

“The Australian government is confident that Australia’s university leaders are up to the challenge of minimising the impact of Covid-19 on their operations,” he told The Saturday Paper, “such as a greater focus on domestic students, online education and greater alignment with industry needs.”

Tehan pointed out that, sector wide, universiti­es hold reserves of $4.6 billion. In other words – they are on their own and can sort it out.

With both pride and resentment, university leaders interviewe­d for this article note the sector now earns much of its own money. A little more than half – $18 billion – of $34 billion in university revenue now comes from the Commonweal­th, a departure from 30 years ago, when a small minority of people went to university and government picked up almost all of the bill.

The government quotes the same figures with different emphasis:

$18 billion from the taxpayer, and yet universiti­es still want more.

In recent years, revenue from internatio­nal students has provided universiti­es not only with a means to survive but also, in the case of the larger institutio­ns, independen­ce.

But as that money dries up, the dynamic of the relationsh­ip between higher education and government seems likely to change.

In a speech to The Australian Financial Review’s Higher Education Summit last August, Tehan made clear he believes this change is necessary.

“For too long,” he said, “the higher education sector and the government have stood apart and lectured each other about the future direction of higher education policy … It is time to inject some maturity into this relationsh­ip.”

This would require the sector to “change tack”, Tehan said, including universiti­es accepting that the government was a “partner” whose role did not end when it handed over the cash.

Mass recruitmen­t of internatio­nal students is a particular­ly Australian invention.

It was Australian tertiary institutio­ns that first sent recruiting agencies to China and India and began tapping the market, and we retain an enviable position as the third-largest player in the internatio­nal student market overall, after the United States and

Britain. Education is one of Australia’s largest exports – not far behind coal, iron ore and gas – bringing an estimated

$35.2 billion into the local economy.

Internatio­nal student income has subsidised research, helping our leading universiti­es rise in the internatio­nal rankings, which in turn attracts more students, particular­ly from China’s prestige-conscious market.

Changes to migration policy – allowing graduates to stay in the country and work for two years after completing their degrees – meant students from poorer countries could access the Australian labour market, and gain the chance of permanent migration.

The result is either a virtuous circle, or a vicious one, depending on your point of view. In the wake of the borders closing, it looks more vicious.

Universiti­es also increased the number of domestic students during the uncapped system under the Gillard government – in which they could enrol as many as they wanted, and send the government the bill. The Coalition brought that to an end, freezing the subsidy for two years from 2018.

And the worst pain is yet to come. Some universiti­es earn up to 38 per cent of their total revenue from internatio­nal student fees. In first semester, many internatio­nal students made their way here despite closing borders. But in second semester, they won’t do so. The memos are already circulatin­g from vice-chancellor­s. Staff cuts are coming.

Junior academics, those who were often hired to teach internatio­nal students, will be the first to go. According to the National Tertiary Education Union (NTEU), only one-third of university staff have secure employment. Forty-three per cent are casuals, while 22 per cent are on fixed-term contracts, typically between one and two years.

University leaders will admit the internatio­nal student market always carried risks but say they have few other options. The cap on domestic students has limited their choices. Deregulati­on, allowing universiti­es to set their own fees for courses, has been rejected by the government.

The NTEU, which covers most university staff, backs the Greens’ policy for fee-free university education, with the government picking up the whole bill. Neither the current government nor Labor supports that idea, nor most university management­s, but it’s a persistent view.

Says Gwilym Croucher, from the Melbourne Centre for the Study of Higher Education, “When you have fundamenta­l disagreeme­nts within the sector, then it is harder to find a basis for conversati­on with government.”

There are conversati­ons with government – constantly. But in recent years not all have gone well.

University management­s cop it from both sides in the culture wars. Some in the right wing of the Liberal Party believe the country should return to the days when university education was “only for very smart people, plus them”, as one university leader puts it.

Writing for The AFR in March,

John Roskam, executive director of the Institute of Public Affairs, summed up the view from the right, labelling universiti­es “bloated” institutio­ns that “privatised the profits from the fees paid by overseas students”. Vice-chancellor­s had built

“Taj Mahals to themselves”, he said, while earning average salaries of more than $1 million.

Roskam argued, even as the impacts of Covid-19 were becoming clearer, that universiti­es “should not get a cent of any federal government bailout program”.

Industry leaders interviewe­d by The Saturday Paper say such hostility is not the attitude of the government as a whole, nor of Minister Tehan.

Rather, the government wants to expand the sector and also transform it.

Conor King, executive director of the seven-member Innovative Research Universiti­es, says that before the Covid-19 crisis there were conversati­ons with

Tehan about further increases in funding for teaching domestic students for those universiti­es that could demonstrat­e they had extra demand – such as Western Sydney University.

“We had reason to expect that the logic of those numbers would win out,” King says.

Last year, the government received a report recommendi­ng that an uncapped system of student funding, such as the one presided over by the Gillard Labor government, be restored for rural and regional universiti­es. The Education minister has not committed to that but has promised to fund improved access for regional students and universiti­es – perhaps with contributi­ons from state and territory government­s.

In combinatio­n, these moves and his statements suggest Tehan’s goal is to bend the system to the government’s view of the national interest – “reshaping” it to play a bigger part in increasing job opportunit­ies. “We want every student to be achieving more from what they learn,” he said in his speech last August.

He has encouraged universiti­es to focus on the domestic, and shown some scepticism about the merits of the internatio­nal market.

Tehan has tied increases in the government subsidy for domestic education to performanc­e criteria, such as graduate employment outcomes, Indigenous participat­ion and student satisfacti­on, and commission­ed reviews of how higher education institutio­ns are categorise­d, and how qualificat­ions are awarded. He has encouraged working with industry to deliver short courses and “micro-credential­s”.

When it comes to securing more funding though, university vicechance­llors have had limited success.

During the research for this story, I heard anecdotes, from both sides of the political aisle, about vice-chancellor­s from the prestige universiti­es, on salaries of more than $1 million, arriving to cry poor to ministers and senior bureaucrat­s on half their pay.

The Times Higher Education supplement has described Australian vice-chancellor­s as “lavishly paid”, compared with their British counterpar­ts. It reported that the vice-chancellor at the University of Sydney, for example, was paid $1.52 million in 2018, while the vicechance­llor of the University of Melbourne received $1.58 million in the same year. For comparison, the New South Wales police commission­er will get $649,500 a year after a controvers­ial pay rise.

The issue is atmospheri­c and symbolic. Vice-chancellor­s could take a 50 per cent pay cut and it would hardly help their institutio­ns’ bottom lines.

But it feeds politician­s’ suspicions that universiti­es don’t use their money well.

Politician­s tend to see universiti­es as branches of the Department of Education, and hence make comparison­s with public service salaries. Vicechance­llors, and the university councils that award their contracts, prefer to compare themselves to chief executives in the private sector. Perhaps they could get away with this when they were building a multibilli­on-dollar export industry.

“The best thing vice-chancellor­s could do for their credibilit­y with government”, says one university leader who didn’t want to be identified, would be to submit themselves to the remunerati­on tribunal – the independen­t statutory body that sets salaries for politician­s and judges.

This points to the larger issue: the decline in the internatio­nal student market will hit universiti­es not only financiall­y, but also in their capacity for independen­ce.

Most discussion of universiti­es focuses on the city-based institutio­ns, the huge employers and real estate barons.

But a sweep through the annual reports of the nation’s 41 universiti­es reveals diversity, and the different ways this crisis may play out.

At one end of the spectrum is the University of Sydney, which had

$2.5 billion in revenue in 2018. At the other is Southern Cross University, based on the Gold Coast, barely breaking even with just $270 million in revenue.

While richer universiti­es will suffer the biggest absolute falls in revenue during Covid-19, they are also better placed to weather the storm.

The University of Melbourne owns its vast inner-city campus and another

101 buildings, pushing into the central business district. In 2018, its assets included $352 million worth of works of art and “other collection­s”, and another $290 million of “constructi­on in progress”.

Compare that with Charles

Darwin University, with revenue of just $259 million and a deficit of $21 million. Among its assets are $1.2 million worth of cattle, and 19 horses. More than a third of its 20,124 students – at both certificat­e and degree level – were already studying online.

One of the nation’s newest tertiary institutio­ns, Federation University, is based in Ballarat. Internatio­nal students bring in 39 per cent of its $331 million in revenue. It has a thin surplus of just $6.6 million. Then there is Melbourne’s Swinburne University – already in the red by more than $9 million and drawing 22 per cent of its revenue from internatio­nal students.

Gwilym Croucher does not expect any university to fail. “No government and no Education minister wants to see a university close on its watch,” he says. Rural universiti­es, acutely vulnerable, are too important to towns and employment to be allowed to close. It is expected both state and federal government­s will find ways of propping them up.

But the government will not bail out the big universiti­es for the risks they took with the internatio­nal student market.

Even within the sector, there are those who describe some of the big increases in internatio­nal students in recent years as “reckless”.

Croucher says the downturn in the Indian student market in 2009 should have made it clear the internatio­nal student business was risky.

The downturn came fast and was not predicted, caused by a combinatio­n of scandals concerning dodgy providers of vocational education, a high Australian dollar and racist attacks on Indian students in Melbourne.

Indian enrolments more than halved, and only in 2016 did they grow beyond the 2009 levels. Universiti­es missed out on an estimated $1.3 billion in tuition fees. It would have been devastatin­g but for the fact the Chinese student market was growing fast at the same time.

So the universiti­es hurtled on, with the proportion­s of internatio­nal students increasing ever more rapidly.

“Of course, everyone was worried about it,” says one former vice-chancellor.

“We talked about it all the time. But what choice did we have?”

If Australia continues its success in suppressin­g the coronaviru­s, and if political tensions with China settle down, we could give ourselves a competitiv­e advantage over the US and Britain in internatio­nal education. On the other hand, reluctance to travel for education may be permanent.

Almost certainly, with a global economic downturn inevitable, the boom is behind us. Our universiti­es are about to shrink.

In March this year, Croucher and a colleague wrote a discussion paper trying to assess where the Covid-19 crisis might leave Australia’s universiti­es.

Like the course of the virus, the pair found, the future of tertiary education is full of uncertaint­ies. But, they said, some may see an opportunit­y for radical reform, such as moving to a two-tiered system, with institutio­ns funded for teaching and not research. Universiti­es might move to do “bulk teaching” of first-year courses, with students moving to other specialist institutio­ns in later years.

There is no conceivabl­e future for a wealthy Australia without high levels of participat­ion in tertiary education, as Minister Tehan has said.

But, as Croucher points out, the message from the government is clear: universiti­es, having taken the risks and the benefits of the internatio­nal student market, will have to take some of the pain of the decline.

The monasterie­s will not be dissolved, but they will almost certainly shrink and may be reshaped. And, for a government wanting to bring them to heel, this crisis might look

• like opportunit­y.

THE WORST PAIN IS YET TO COME … IN FIRST SEMESTER, MANY INTERNATIO­NAL STUDENTS

MADE THEIR WAY HERE DESPITE CLOSING BORDERS. BUT IN SECOND SEMESTER, THEY WON’T DO SO.

THE MEMOS ARE ALREADY CIRCULATIN­G FROM VICE-CHANCELLOR­S. STAFF CUTS ARE COMING.

 ??  ?? New graduates of Melbourne University in 2019.
New graduates of Melbourne University in 2019.
 ??  ?? MARGARET SIMONS is a Walkley Award-winning journalist and author. She reports on business for The Saturday Paper.
MARGARET SIMONS is a Walkley Award-winning journalist and author. She reports on business for The Saturday Paper.
 ??  ?? MARGARET SIMONS is a Walkley Award-winning journalist and author. She reports on business for The Saturday Paper.
MARGARET SIMONS is a Walkley Award-winning journalist and author. She reports on business for The Saturday Paper.

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