Most universities in Australia are publically funded and most courses, for domestic students, are funded largely by the government, but also partly by student contributions (either upfront or delayed and a debt incurred that is paid back through the taxation system--a higher education loan called a HELP debt).
The amount of the student contribution varies with the course studied and is partly set based on the earning potential of graduates in the field. Therefore medicine, engineering, dentistry, and law students (currently) pay the highest student contribution, and arts and humanities students pay the lowest. The current system does not vary the student contribution amount according to the cost of the degree to the government. E.g. a bachelor of medicine costs the government several times more than a law degree, but the student contributions are the same.
The government recently overhauled its student contribution model to better serve what it believes to be Australia's future needs. Degrees in some STEM fields will now cost less, as well as nursing and teaching degrees. Humanities courses will cost significantly more (one estimate I've read shows that humanities students will now pay for 96% of the cost of their course, basically unsubsidised).
It goes without saying that the cost charged to students is sex-neutral. And of course it goes without saying that the changes are being decried as an 'attack on women' by the Greens party.
From The Guardian:
https://www.theguardian.com/austral...y-fee-overhaul-shown-to-leave-women-worse-off
Note that Faruqi does not say why it is unfair and illogical--she asserts only that it is so.
And from SMH: https://www.smh.com.au/business/wor...ars-more-for-uni-courses-20200622-p5553n.html
Note the multiple hidden assumptions as well as deceit here: Kirillova expects us to accept that only STEM subjects are now "affordable", that her imagined counterfactual is relevant to public policy, and she is silent on the large reduction in fees to nursing and teaching students, the majority of whom are women.
A lie. They face the same options as before. Also, boys who did not choose STEM subjects for years 11 and 12 would face the same "limited options".
This, if true, also applies to boys, but it isn't true. Australia pioneered income-dependent debt repayment through the taxation system. Nobody has to pay university fees up front.
That's because women work less over their lifetimes.
Note that the decrease in fees for nursing and psychology is mentioned by Cassells, but Kirillova doesn't care where women are paying less:
...seriously?
Note that under the current system, women are far less likely to pay back their student debt than men. That's because women choose lower-paying fields and work less during their lifetimes. And, because of the way HELP debts are set up in Australia, if you have not paid back your debt at the time of your death, it doesn't come out of your estate either.
In other words, men--who pay the lion's share of income tax--are already paying for women's university debts. But a sex-neutral increase in certain subjects combined with a sex-neutral decrease in others?
That's an attack on women.
The amount of the student contribution varies with the course studied and is partly set based on the earning potential of graduates in the field. Therefore medicine, engineering, dentistry, and law students (currently) pay the highest student contribution, and arts and humanities students pay the lowest. The current system does not vary the student contribution amount according to the cost of the degree to the government. E.g. a bachelor of medicine costs the government several times more than a law degree, but the student contributions are the same.
The government recently overhauled its student contribution model to better serve what it believes to be Australia's future needs. Degrees in some STEM fields will now cost less, as well as nursing and teaching degrees. Humanities courses will cost significantly more (one estimate I've read shows that humanities students will now pay for 96% of the cost of their course, basically unsubsidised).
It goes without saying that the cost charged to students is sex-neutral. And of course it goes without saying that the changes are being decried as an 'attack on women' by the Greens party.
From The Guardian:
https://www.theguardian.com/austral...y-fee-overhaul-shown-to-leave-women-worse-off
Women account for two-thirds of the students in the university courses facing the biggest increase in fees under the Australian government’s proposed overhaul, according to new analysis by the Greens.
The government has proposed to more than double the student contributions for humanities, social sciences, media and communications courses – with yearly fees increasing from $6,804 to $14,500 – although this does not apply to current students.
According to analysis of education department data from 2018, while women make up about 58% of domestic bachelor students across the board, they represent about 67% students in these heavily affected fields of humanities, social sciences, media and communications.
The Greens also have calculated that if the same number of female full-time equivalent students enrolled in these particular fields in 2018 (80,516) were now subject to the Coalition’s new fee structure, they would be saddled with a collective total of $1.86bn in additional debt over the course of a three-year degree.
While the analysis does not give a full picture of the impact of the university overhaul – given some other fields of study face more modest fee increases and other areas such as teaching and nursing are subject to fee cuts – it does highlight the disproportionate impact on women of the large fee increases in humanities, social sciences, media and communications.
Greens senator and education spokesperson Mehreen Faruqi said the analysis by her office showed the government’s plan was “a travesty” and “a disgraceful attack on women as they suffer the worst impacts of the pandemic”.
“Doubling the cost of humanities and communications degrees is not just unfair and illogical, it is an anti-women move,” she said. “It will push women further into debt and lead to more long-term financial insecurity for them.”
Note that Faruqi does not say why it is unfair and illogical--she asserts only that it is so.
Faruqi said more people would want to study from next year as the Covid recession carried on and “the last thing we should be doing is burdening them with billions more in debt”.
The increase in student fees for the humanities was one part of sweeping changes unveiled by the Coalition earlier this month.
...
The Greens argued that their estimate of the number and proportion of women affected by the fee increases in humanities and communications was conservative, because the analysis was based on full-time-equivalent student numbers.
Because women were more likely to study part time than men, the raw number affected was likely to be higher. In addition, an overall increase in domestic student numbers next year due to the recession and the “baby bump” linked to Peter Costello’s baby bonus scheme in the early 2000s.
And from SMH: https://www.smh.com.au/business/wor...ars-more-for-uni-courses-20200622-p5553n.html
As a former trade commissioner and mother of three daughters, Elena Kirillova is concerned that the increase in fees for humanities courses will have a disproportionate impact on career options for women.
Her concerns come as new analysis by Bankwest Curtin Economics Centre shows that young women can expect to pay an extra $498 million each year towards their education, and young men an additional $339 million under the changes.
The federal government has announced a plan to more than double university fees for humanities subjects and reduce them for science subjects. Education Minister Dan Tehan says the government wants students to think about choosing university subjects that would boost their employment prospects.
With the benefit of a free education, Ms Kirillova graduated with a law degree from the University of Sydney in 1984. Ten years later she became one of the youngest female law partners in London.
"If STEM was the only affordable university option for me, my 18-year-old self would probably have not gone to university," she says.
Note the multiple hidden assumptions as well as deceit here: Kirillova expects us to accept that only STEM subjects are now "affordable", that her imagined counterfactual is relevant to public policy, and she is silent on the large reduction in fees to nursing and teaching students, the majority of whom are women.
Girls who did not choose STEM subjects for Years 11 and 12 looking to start university in 2021 may now face limited options.
A lie. They face the same options as before. Also, boys who did not choose STEM subjects for years 11 and 12 would face the same "limited options".
"Unless they are able to rely on the on-going financial goodwill of their parents, they are now limited to the few affordable options,
This, if true, also applies to boys, but it isn't true. Australia pioneered income-dependent debt repayment through the taxation system. Nobody has to pay university fees up front.
Why is her daughter 'dispirited'? Her degree will be grandfathered in under the old fee system.steered towards gender stereotypical choices of nursing, teaching and psychology," Ms Kirillova says. "One of my daughters, half-way through a history and international relations degree, feels dispirited now."
The federal government says no current student will pay increased fees. Fees will be frozen for students enrolled in courses where costs are going up.
No. Individuals of either sex enrolled in the same courses will pay the same as each other.Associate Professor Rebecca Cassells, principal research fellow at Curtin University's Bankwest Curtin Economics Centre, who has analysed the impact of the government's proposed changes to student and Commonwealth contributions, said the average additional cost for a female student would be $5405 compared to average savings of $2404. Average annual additional costs for men would be $4755 compared to average savings of $2158.
"While a greater number of women and men attract savings, the overall impact of the proposed changes is that both genders will be worse off due to the size of the additional costs students will now face. And women lose out by a greater margin than men," she said.
Women make up 58 per cent of university students, so of course women as a group will pay more in total. In feminist utopia, it would be even more unfair to women if 100 per cent of graduates were women--then women would be carrying 100 per cent of the university debt!!"Combining the proposed student contribution costs and savings, we can see that overall, young women will be paying an additional $498 million each year towards their education, and young men an additional $339 million if the current education patterns and costs remain the same."
Young women were more likely to make the decision to go on to university than young men, but receive lower returns from university education than men.
"Women with a humanities degree will earn around $1.11 million less than their male peers over their lifetime," Associate Professor Cassells said.
That's because women work less over their lifetimes.
Associate Professor Cassells said funding from both student and Commonwealth contributions would be closer to the median cost for most courses. But student contributions would increase substantially for a number of courses including law, economics, history, sociology and philosophy.
She said the increase in student contributions for society and culture would be $7696 each year – the highest dollar value increase. This field has the largest number of domestic student enrolments – around 210,000 students.
"Here, women make up two-thirds of enrolments," Associate Professor Cassells said. "Other disciplines with high female enrolment include nursing and clinical psychology, both have more than 80 per cent women, and both have seen a decrease in student contributions overall with greater government support."
Note that the decrease in fees for nursing and psychology is mentioned by Cassells, but Kirillova doesn't care where women are paying less:
And not many scientists have a diplomacy background. What's her point? That the extremely pampered and prestigious role of being a diplomat will require a greater investment by the people benefiting from the role? Or is her point that diplomacy roles discriminate against STEM graduates?Ms Kirillova fears the proposed government overhaul of university fees will mean that university education will no longer be universal. She is concerned it will be vocational and affordable for those with an aptitude for sciences, but expensive for those wishing to pursue history and social sciences.
During her time working for Austrade, Ms Kirillova, who lives in Sydney, says she was privileged to work with some of Australia’s finest diplomats, navigating geopolitical issues often in hostile environments.
"Many are historians, and a significant minority are women," she says. "I did not come across any with STEM backgrounds.
"In this complex world, will we be well served by diplomats who have no understanding of the culture and history of our allies, and more importantly, our adversaries?"
...seriously?
Marian Baird, professor of gender and employment relations at the University of Sydney Business School said any increase in university fees would affect women because they represented 58 per cent of tertiary enrolments. The majority of enrolments in teaching and nursing were women.
"The more important issue is whether there will actually be decent jobs – properly paid – at the end of the degree," she said. "I think that’s where there is a real price signal.
"The danger is that only those who can afford to pay more for the higher cost degrees will undertake them, thus leading to more segmentation in the workforce and more of a gender pay gap later."
Under the federal government changes, the cost of humanities and communications courses will more than double from $6804 to $14,500 from next year. The cost of a law degree will increase by 28 per cent from $11,155 to $14,500 a year.
Teaching and nursing courses will be among those that drop by more than 46 per cent to around $3700 a year. Fees for science, health, architecture, environmental science, IT and engineering courses will be reduced by 20 per cent to about $7700.
Associate Professor Cassells said a number of subjects would be either better or worse off. The largest additional student costs would come from society and culture where women make up around two-thirds of total students. Women studying subjects in this field including economics, law, philosophy and history will now be paying an additional $1 billion each year and covering 96 per cent of their course costs instead of 45 per cent.
"This is by far the highest student contribution," she said.
Note that under the current system, women are far less likely to pay back their student debt than men. That's because women choose lower-paying fields and work less during their lifetimes. And, because of the way HELP debts are set up in Australia, if you have not paid back your debt at the time of your death, it doesn't come out of your estate either.
In other words, men--who pay the lion's share of income tax--are already paying for women's university debts. But a sex-neutral increase in certain subjects combined with a sex-neutral decrease in others?
That's an attack on women.