The Australian governmentâs plans to cut university budgets and introduce performance-related teaching funding have come under further fire from universities.
The governmentâs plans, which include a 2.5 per cent cut in university funding and a 7.5 per cent increase in tuition fees, are aimed at addressing the national budget deficit. But they face an uncertain passage through Parliament.
The University of Melbourneâs submission describes the reform package as âa piecemeal policy offeringâ that would âcause severe detriment across the system if implementedâ, the reported. âThis is not a package representing genuine sectoral reform,â the submission says.
The governmentâs package also contains plans to allocate 7.5 per cent of funding on a performance-contingent basis.
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Western Sydney University says that the proposal âwould throw almost any university into operating deficitâ if applied, the Australian reported.
The Australian Catholic Universityâs submission says: âIt would be a perverse outcome if, under the banner of improving the sustainability of higher education, the governmentâs reforms forced some universities to shut their doors.
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âA quarter of all Australian universities would be in deficit if subjected to this level of funding cut.â
Meanwhile, Simon Birmingham, the education minister, provoked controversy when he said: âAustralian universities have been enjoying a serious flow of money â rivers of gold, if you like â since the demand-driven system for universities was put in place a number of years ago.
âI think the university sector, while maybe wanting to cling to every revenue stream it can, needs to be realistic that itâs been on an incredibly good wicket.â
Universities would receive funding growth âa little bit slower than it would have otherwise beenâ under the governmentâs changes, he said.Â
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The reported that Universities Australia said in its submission to the Senate inquiry: âThe government has claimed that universities are able to absorb the proposed funding cuts based on their published accounting surpluses.
âThis argument misunderstands the true position of universities and how they operate.â
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