A Senate committee has endorsed legislation to cap overseas enrolments in Australiaâs tertiary institutions, saying international education âmust be managedâ.
In a published on 9 October, the Education and Employment Legislation Committee recommended relatively minor changes to the bill, including removal of the education ministerâs power to set course-level caps at universities and public vocational training colleges.
The committee also said the minister should be required to give at least six monthsâ notice of changes to any institutionâs quota, up from the three months outlined in the bill, and to consult more broadly before setting the caps.
Other recommendations included amending the legislation âto exempt specific classes of studentsâ from the caps. The government has already announced exemptions.
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Senators from the opposition Liberal Party offered no additional suggestions, despite blasting the cap schemeâs âincompetence, secrecy, uncertainty and unfairnessâ.
Only cross-bench senators offered alternative recommendations. The Australian Greens said the legislation should not be passed unless parts authorising enrolment caps were removed. Mechanisms to improve integrity in international education, which make up most of the bill, were widely supported.
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The Greens also said the government should withdraw and rewrite the legislation, immediately revoke ministerial direction 107 and increase university funding.
The most substantial amendment proposals came from independent senator David Pocock, who recommended 11 additional changes to the enrolment cap provisions.
They included delaying the caps by a year, easing the penalty provisions, requiring a mechanism for independent reviews and mandating a âworkable system for reallocating unused placesâ.
Mr Pocock also advocated âlegislated criteriaâ for setting the caps, with tighter parliamentary oversight. And he recommended a âfloorâ of at least 85 per cent of the previous yearâs cap to give institutions âa minimum level of certainty to plan their budgetsâ.
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Such proposals appear unlikely to pass the Senate, with both major parties mostly supporting the billâs current provisions. The main question now is not whether it will pass but when, with just nine further Senate sitting days this year.
The committeeâs Labor chair, Tony Sheldon, issued a statement pressuring the opposition parties to pass the legislation quickly. âItâs time [for] the Liberals and Nationals [to] stop delaying and get on board,â it said.
âThe opposition couldnât come up with a single recommendation for how they think the bill should be improved. The Liberals and Nationals complained that the caps were too harsh, while at the same time promising to cut numbers even further. The sector needs to return to sustainable levels of international enrolments.â
The committeeâs majority report âacknowledges the concernsâ over the caps but says the Education Department is continuing consultation with the sector. It notes that education minister Jason Clare will âconsiderâ transferring âcertain powersâ to the Australian Tertiary Education Commission âwhen establishedâ and has committed to replacing ministerial direction âsubject to the passage of this billâ.
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âThe important measures in this bill are the next steps in strengthening Australiaâs international education sector,â the majority report says.
The opposition senators said the governmentâs âchaotic approach to policy makingâ had disproportionately harmed small universities and private colleges. âStudent caps favour Australiaâs most prestigious universitiesâŠit is clear the government has looked after the big end of town.â
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Australian National University policy analyst Andrew Norton that the committee had accepted that âcourse caps make no senseâ, but nevertheless decided they should apply to private colleges. Professor Norton said the majority report recommendations had âprobably been agreed to by the ministerâ.Â
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