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Birrell, Bob – Australian Universities' Review, 2020
Australian universities have used the revenue from overseas student fees to enhance their international research standing. COVID-19 has undermined this business model. A new strategy is required, based on the universities' contribution to making Australian industry more self-reliant. This outcome will require a national industry policy, such as…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, College Role, Higher Education
Thompson, Greg; Hogan, Anna; Rahimi, Mark – Australian Educational Researcher, 2019
In Australia, debates around school funding tend to focus on comparisons of funding between school systems and what this means for equity. In this paper, while we look at school-level funding between systems, our emphasis is on private funding in public schools with a particular emphasis on the relationship between private funding and ICSEA. Using…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Finance, Private Financial Support, Public Schools
Palmer, Nigel; Abrahams, Natasha; Pace, Mark; De Rango, Emily – Australian Universities' Review, 2018
There has been substantial growth in postgraduate coursework study in Australia since moves towards deregulation began in the early 1990s. This growth in postgraduate coursework education has brought benefits for both institutions and individuals. However, in a deregulated fee environment these benefits now risk being outweighed by the mounting…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Graduate Study, Administrative Organization, Marketing
Hillman, Nick – Higher Education Policy Institute, 2018
In England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland, the funding systems for full-time, first-time undergraduate students differ. Despite these differences, universities in each of the three parts of the United Kingdom (UK) with tuition fees--England, Wales and Northern Ireland--all share a common tendency to set them at the same (maximum) rate for…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Undergraduate Students, Educational Finance, Financial Support
Birrell, Bob; Smith, T. Fred – Australian Universities' Review, 2010
Education is regularly publicised as Australia's third-largest export behind coal and iron ore. Although it cannot be disputed that education is a major export, the published figures are inflated because of three broad factors. First, estimates of student expenditure on goods and services in Australia are based on students with different…
Descriptors: Foreign Students, Foreign Countries, Expenditures, Student Characteristics
Group of Eight (NJ1), 2011
The Review of Higher Education Base Funding gives Government an historic opportunity to set higher education funding on a sound footing for the future, and to commit the support needed to achieve its important quality and participation goals. There is a significant funding gap, which has led universities to neglect infrastructure and let class…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Educational Finance, Foreign Countries, Income
McCaig, Colin – Journal of Education and Work, 2011
This article explores the impact of student self-financing systems on inequalities of access to higher education (HE) through comparative analysis of two national systems, those of England and Australia. The analysis of the historical development of HE in each nation identifies a set of comparative global themes: the expansion of HE in response to…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Labor Market, Foreign Countries, Financial Support
Watson, Louise; Ryan, Chris – Australian Journal of Education, 2010
For over three decades, government subsidies have been a major source of funds for private schools in Australia. Private schools now enrol more than one-third of all students. Analysing administrative and participation data, we find that Australian private schools have used government subsidies to increase the quality of their services (that is,…
Descriptors: Public Schools, Private Schools, Foreign Countries, Grants
Birch, Elisa Rose; Miller, Paul W. – Australian Universities' Review, 2008
The Higher Education Contribution Scheme (HECS) has been advanced as having many desirable properties. These have been discussed largely from the theoretical perspective, and with the individual rather than the family as the reference point. This paper explores whether HECS is working the way it was intended. Is it having undesirable or…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Academic Achievement, Loan Repayment
Anderson, Don – Vestes, 1985
In contrast to the most commonly suggested approaches to equalizing access to higher education in Australia, either permanently abolishing fees or reinstating fees, the most equitable solution would be to spend comparable amounts on all forms of postsecondary education and training, spreading resources to a broader range of programs and…
Descriptors: Access to Education, Educational Finance, Equal Education, Fees
Martin, L. M. – Journal of Tertiary Educational Administration, 1993
Implications of two trends in Australian higher education are considered. These trends are shift to a fee-for-services system in which the government pays less of the cost of higher education; and move toward deregulation, with elimination of centralized planning and emphasis placed on institutional response to student demand. (MSE)
Descriptors: College Administration, Decentralization, Educational Economics, Federal Regulation
Baker, Ian – Journal of Tertiary Educational Administration, 1993
Australia's new policy of encouraging higher education to market its services to foreign students and introduce fees is examined. It is suggested that higher education needs to give more attention to long-term implications of the policy, including pricing, marketing, obtaining feedback, and clarity of communication with other cultural groups. (MSE)
Descriptors: College Administration, Educational Change, Educational Finance, Fees
Rochford, Francine – Education and the Law, 2006
The Australian Federal Government recently amended the Higher Education Support Act 2003. The effect of this amendment, which came into force on 1 January 2006, is to abolish compulsory up-front fees for the funding of student unions. Voluntary student unionism has been a plank of the Liberal (conservative) platform for many years, but its…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Student Organizations, Student Unions, Foreign Countries
Puplick, C. J. – Vestes, 1985
The simple abolition of university fees in Australia has failed to meet its stated objective of equalizing access to higher education and should be reinstated, with financial assistance available to qualified students unable to pay. (MSE)
Descriptors: Access to Education, Educational Economics, Educational Finance, Equal Education
Karmel, Peter – Journal of Tertiary Educational Administration, 1992
Concerns arising from the substantial changes in Australian higher education in recent years are discussed, including system centralization, elimination of the binary system, institutional stability, underfunding, and system size. A new fee-based funding system is proposed as a means of raising revenue, improving quality, promoting efficiency, and…
Descriptors: Centralization, Change Strategies, College Administration, Educational Change
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