Australian universities face a resumption of the tuition fee deregulation debate when the ādust settlesā from the coronavirus pandemic, according to some sector strategists and consultants.
Research strategist Thomas Barlow said that with revenue collapsing āat least temporarilyā, some form of fee deregulation ā last proposed by in 2014 by Christopher Pyne, who was then education minister, and twice blocked by the Senate ā would be āback on the tableā.
ā[It] would provide universities with a mechanism so they can operate,ā he said. āItĀ makes sense to reopen the conversation and think aĀ bit differently about the implications for access.ā
Dr Barlow said the key argument against deregulation was that it priced the poor out of university. āBut 40Ā per cent of the population goes to university anyway. Deregulation may afford a mechanism for using the fees, from people [able] or willing to pay more, to help subsidise the education of those unable to pay at higher rates.ā
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Limits on fees would be needed to protect students and stop loan costs spiralling out of control, he said. āYou donāt want the government underwriting a loan scheme where prices are completely deregulated.ā
But a carefully designed approach might attract political support by sidestepping the ātension between a wealthy elite and the deprived massesā, he argued.
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Stephen Parker, national education sector leader with consultants KPMG Australia, said he would support consideration of tuition fee deregulation as āpart of a rebuilding strategyā.
āIt should at least be looked at,ā he said. āBut it can have huge reverberations. There could be universities that just arenāt viable under that arrangement.ā
Professor Parker was Australiaās only vice-chancellor to publicly oppose the 2014 deregulation proposal when he headed the University of Canberra. He said the idea had been a ārush of bloodā that would have given universities a āsugar hitā but spawned long-term disaster.
āIt came from nowhere and wasnāt thought through. It would have led to higher fee and debt levels and lifted inflation,ā he argued.
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Professor Parker said that if fee deregulation were revisited, there would be questions over studentsā tolerance for debt. āThose old days of university at whatever cost, weāll pay it back ³¾²¹Ć±²¹²Ō²¹ ā thatās gone,ā he added.
āTimes have changed. You may find that universities canāt even command [current] fee levels. Value for money and debt aversion ā the pincer movement of those two social forces could lead to real change.ā
Professor Parker said there was also a need to revisit the ābloated cost basesā of a sector where academic staff constituted less than 45Ā per cent of the workforce. Universities would need to jettison their āadministrative intermediariesā, harnessing self-service, outsourcing, automation and machine intelligence to improve administration and reduce costs, he added.
āI donāt see why a university shouldnāt aim to have no administrators at all,ā he said. āCore human resources, financeĀ ā [these are] business processes which just cost too much money in universities, because of the way they do things.
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āAnd thereās no reason why an academic shouldnāt share an office. They donāt need all their books. NoĀ one ever looks at them.ā
Dr Barlow said: āItās hard to even imagine what things are going to look like in two years.
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āBut by thinking about what could happen, it will helpĀ [universities]Ā position themselves in dealing with policymakers when things return to something more like normal.ā
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