logo
Young Australians urged to think twice before going to university: Debt and regret after dropping out

Young Australians urged to think twice before going to university: Debt and regret after dropping out

Daily Mail​15-05-2025
A social media star has warned young Australians to seriously reconsider going to university, saying it left him with nothing but regret and thousands of dollars in debt.
Jack Cooper issued the warning in a video shared to social media about his own university experience after enrolling in a business degree.
'So five years I went to uni thinking that's just what I had to do in life,' he said.
'I enrolled, went for a year and absolutely hated my life.'
He said he felt misled by teachers and the school system, and claimed they pressured students into thinking university was the only path to success.
'Do you know when you're in school and the teachers are like "yeah you've got to go to uni, you've got to get a good ATAR" and all of this,' he said.
'They are scamming you. They are setting you up for failure.'
After he endured subjects like accounting and finance, Mr Cooper realised it wasn't for him.
'After a year, I dropped out and I didn't think too much of it. I was like "yeah I know I've got a bit of a HECS debt but who cares".'
But he didn't realise just how much debt he got himself into by giving university a go and leaving so soon.
'Let's bring it forward to now. I've just had to spend $13,000 to pay off my entire HECS debt because of something to do with my taxes or something, I don't really know but I had to pay off the whole thing,' he said.
'It's $13,000 down the drain because I dropped out. Don't get me wrong, I know this is a very common thing for people but back then I didn't really think like that.'
Cooper said young Aussies needed to have a good think about whether university was right for them because it if it didn't work out it could really set a young person back, financially, in an already tough cost of living crisis.
'My advice to you all is if you are going to uni, only go if you truly want to be there and you're setting yourself up for the life that you really want, because otherwise you'll end up like me, spending $13,000 on f****g nothing,' he said.
Mr Cooper's message resonated with thousands online.
'We don't realise, as freshly 18 year olds, what that money actually means. We just think "oh yeah we'll pay it off when we get a real job anyway". The longer I do my degree I'm realising how much $82,000 actually is,' one said.
'They don't educate us about HECS properly in school. We are just babies at 18 going to uni with no idea about the weight of that debt on us!' another said.
What's the alternative to uni for young Aussies?
Melbourne woman Chelsea Taylor has three unfinished university degrees and about $30,000 in student debt.
The 23-year-old told Daily Mail Australia she felt a 'real big push to go to university' and did a year studying each in Exercise Sport Science, Teaching and Nursing.
'It was at the end of my third year of university that I realised that I didn't want to be there – I wasn't enjoying university, and it wasn't leading to what I wanted,' Ms Taylor said.
Ms Taylor said she was 'feeling lost' and unsure about her career when her brother saw a TV ad calling for Melbourne Metro Train drivers.
The young Aussie applied and landed the role. She has been working as a train driver since September 2020.
'When I started as a train driver, I didn't know anything about trains... but the training required was incredibly comprehensive,' Ms Taylor said.
'It can be a challenging job, it's a big responsibility transporting hundreds of people at once, but it's worth it,' Ms Taylor said.
Ms Taylor wished she had discovered her job sooner.
'When I finished high school, I didn't know there were great jobs available if you didn't go to university or didn't go to TAFE,' Ms Taylor said.
'There's also a stigma that if you're not going to university, you're wasting an opportunity. I think this couldn't be more wrong.'
Many high school leavers are snapping up jobs in the mining industry, some of which pay up to $120,000 a year - to save money and further their careers.
Janne D'Huyvetter, 29, works as a FIFO (fly-in fly-out) cleaner and earns up to $2,650 a week.
Ms D'Huyvetter said it's easy for her to save money because she doesn't have to spend on things like a gym, housing, food, or going out since everything is provided at the camp.
'Every mine site has a recreation room with ping pong and pool table. Most of them also have a pool, gym, and a bar.
Multi-millionaire entrepreneur Dick Smith told Daily Mail Australia we should get youngsters out of the lecture halls and into practical work.
'If you want to become a doctor, or an engineer, well, that (university education is) a necessity - but so often it is wasted, especially with people who get arts degrees and never use them,' Mr Smith said.
The businessman said Australia needs more qualified tradespeople as record population growth - fuelled by immigration - has spiked the demands for all kinds of tradesmen, which are now in short supply.
'A tradesman can earn really good money, especially if he or she opens their own business,' Mr Smith said.
'My local electrician, he's a millionaire. He's done very well. And so, to me, a tradesperson who opens their own business can do incredibly well in Australia.
Australian universities experienced a record high dropout rate, with 25.4 per cent of students who started a bachelor's degree in 2017 dropping out by 2022.
The increase in dropouts coincided with a 13 per cent decrease in university enrolments since 2016. There was also a 7.1 per cent rise in student debts in 2023.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

TikTok's Parent Company Is Bringing Its Tech to Chinese EVs
TikTok's Parent Company Is Bringing Its Tech to Chinese EVs

Auto Blog

time2 hours ago

  • Auto Blog

TikTok's Parent Company Is Bringing Its Tech to Chinese EVs

By signing up I agree to the Terms of Use and acknowledge that I have read the Privacy Policy . You may unsubscribe from email communication at anytime. The hybrid sports coupe is nearly here, and Honda is revealing more information for us to dig into. View post: Everything We Know About The 2026 Honda Prelude Before Its September Debut There is no doubt that TikTok is the screen time king If one thing can be truly described as a guilty pleasure in today's digital landscape, it would be TikTok. The infamous short-form video platform has become the dominant social media application, capturing the attention of millions around the world. As much as we may wish to resist the digital siren call, the app's algorithm draws users in with an endless stream of ultra-personalized content that can have us hooked for hours. Its effectiveness has spawned a wave of TikTok imitators from American tech companies such as Google's YouTube Shorts or Meta's Instagram Reels. However, TikTok is more than just a social media video app for influencers. Its parent company, ByteDance, is a technological powerhouse that also specializes in cloud and AI services. According to reports out of China, it could be launching a new initiative to get its cutting-edge tech into the next generation of tech-infused cars. MG IM5 — Source: MG Motor TikTok's parent company may bring its tech to future cars According to recent reports from CarNewsChina and IT-Home, the parent company of TikTok is engaged with Chinese automaker SAIC on a new venture called Doubao Auto. SAIC is one of the 'Big Four' state-owned Chinese automakers, which produces cars under the IM, Maxus, MG (yes, that MG), Rising Auto, Roewe, Baojun, Wuling, Hongyan, and Sunwin brands, and under joint ventures with Volkswagen and General Motors. ByteDance and SAIC, as part of Doubao Auto, are said to be working on intelligent automotive solutions (a Chinese tech world buzzword for autonomous driving features), focusing on 'cockpit and intelligent driving' systems. Doubao Auto would use the Volcano Engine as its software backbone to make a software system similar to Huawei's HarmonyOS, an operating system designed to provide a personalized experience across devices like phones, tablets, smart TVs, and even Huawei-developed electric cars. Autoblog Newsletter Autoblog brings you car news; expert reviews and exciting pictures and video. Research and compare vehicles, too. Sign up or sign in with Google Facebook Microsoft Apple By signing up I agree to the Terms of Use and acknowledge that I have read the Privacy Policy . You may unsubscribe from email communication at anytime. MG IM5 — Source: MG Motor The Volcano Engine is already used by prominent Chinese electric vehicle firms, including the state-owned Changan Auto and GAC Aion, as well as the Geely-linked Lynk & Co. Bytedance is planning to invest in an innovative driving solutions company and has recently hired several former employees from the autonomous driving firm Momenta, according to sources cited by IT-Home. This report follows an earlier report from April 2025, in which SAIC president Jia Jianxu said that it is working with Volcano Engine and other AI partners to create in-car software for tailored personalisation and develop a 'comprehensive innovative ecosystem to meet individual user needs.' Yang Liwei, who runs Volcano Engine's automotive division and leads the Smart Mobility and Embodiment Research Institute, mentioned partnering with SAIC to create an AI cockpit product using ByteDance's Doubao large model. He says this new product can act like a personalized in-car assistant that can figure out what users want before they even say it. 'It not only has multimodal perception capabilities, but is more like a personalized assistant that can understand human intentions,' Yang said in April. 'It can predict user needs in advance and think what you want.' Final thoughts CarNewsChina reported that on July 29, a spokesperson from ByteDance's Volcano Engine denied the rumors that Doubao Auto was a 'direct intelligent driving' business, clarifying that while the Volcano engine provides algorithmic training platforms for its automotive clients, 'it currently has no plans to enter the autonomous driving business.' Besides the purported autonomous driving, ByteDance's AI partnership with SAIC is already a technological bag of futuristic marbles. Mind you, Yang Liwei, the guy who runs Volcano Engine's automotive division, said back in April 2025 that the new product that they are working on with SAIC 'is more like a personalized assistant that can understand human intentions' that 'can predict user needs in advance and think what you want.' Knowing how scarily detailed the TikTok algorithm knows me, that's one heck of a hunk of technology that they might put behind those touch screens in future SAIC-brand cars. About the Author James Ochoa View Profile

Productivity Commission backs biggest Australian company tax rate cut in 40 years
Productivity Commission backs biggest Australian company tax rate cut in 40 years

The Guardian

time2 hours ago

  • The Guardian

Productivity Commission backs biggest Australian company tax rate cut in 40 years

The company tax rate would be slashed to 20% for all but the very biggest businesses as part of an 'ambitious' Productivity Commission proposal aimed at boosting investment and revitalising the country's flagging productivity. The plan would deliver the biggest reduction in the company income tax rate in nearly 40 years and dramatically shift Australia from having one of the highest to one of the lowest rates in the world. The PC on Thursday night released its interim report on how to create a more dynamic and resilient economy, the first of five separate inquiries commissioned by Jim Chalmers late last year. Alex Robson, the PC's deputy chair, said the tax proposal was 'ambitious but sensible'. Sign up: AU Breaking News email 'We need to spark growth through investment and competition – the best way to do that is to reform our company tax system,' he said. Robson argued that Australia's high headline company tax rate versus its peers was a barrier to foreign investment and there was evidence that it was driving local entrepreneurs to set up business in lower-taxing countries. He argued that lowering the tax rate for the more dynamic smaller and medium-sized business sector would provide the biggest 'bang for buck' when it came to driving local investment. The PC also recommended the government do more to reduce the 'ever-growing thicket of rules and regulations', which was acting as a handbrake on growth by making it more difficult to, for example, supply homes, build green energy infrastructure and start a business. 'Better regulation and approvals' will be a major area of discussion on day two of Chalmers' three-day economic reform roundtable to be held in three weeks' time. Chalmers, in a statement accompanying the release of the PC's interim report, said 'reducing regulatory burden is an important part of our productivity effort' but made no mention of the company tax plan. Labor has sent no signals that company tax relief is among its reform priorities and has instead looked at ways to crack down on tax avoidance by multinationals and make changes to the resource rent tax for gas exporters. Ed Husic, the former industry minister, in May last year was reportedly scolded for publicly backing a lower company tax rate or expanded investment allowance. A survey by Newgate released this week found that only 25% of Australians supported cutting the company tax rate, and nearly half opposed it. But Robson said the PC was 'focused on good reform ideas'. 'We think it's a good proposal that's worthy of serious consideration, and we leave the politics to others.' Economists have long blamed Australia's declining productivity on a similar decline in capital expenditure as a share of the economy and Robson said the company tax cut was the 'main lever' to drive investment growth. Under the plan, the company tax rate on the 1.2m companies that earn below $50m would drop from 25% to 20%, while the rate for roughly 7,000 businesses earning between $50m and $1bn would fall from 30% to 20%. That would leave about 500 of the biggest firms with no additional tax relief. The deep cut to the company income tax rate would be accompanied by a world-first net cashflow tax of 5%, which would apply to all businesses and help make the tax package 'broadly' revenue neutral over the longer term. 'The introduction of the net cashflow tax means that while most companies will pay less tax, the total tax burden will rise for some large companies, especially those not undertaking new investment,' the report said. 'Overall, the new tax will incentivise new capital expenditure across all firm sizes.' The PC will now conduct another round of consultation ahead of a final report due by the end of the year.

How will Australia's under-16s social media ban be enforced, and which platforms will be exempt?
How will Australia's under-16s social media ban be enforced, and which platforms will be exempt?

The Guardian

time3 hours ago

  • The Guardian

How will Australia's under-16s social media ban be enforced, and which platforms will be exempt?

Australians using a range of social media platforms including Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, Snapchat and X will need to have their age checked to ensure they're 16 or older when the social media ban comes into effect from early December. Sign up: AU Breaking News email How will it work? And what information will people need to hand over? From 10 December, new laws will apply to platforms that meet the government's definition of an 'age-restricted social media platform', which has the sole or significant purpose of enabling social interaction with two or more users, and which allows users to post material on the service. The government has not specified by name any platforms that will be included in the ban, meaning any site that meets the above definition could be included except if they meet the exemptions released on Wednesday. The prime minister, Anthony Albanese, has said that the covered platforms include – but are not limited to – Facebook, Instagram, X, Snapchat, and YouTube. The communications minister, Anika Wells, said these platforms would be expected to take reasonable steps to deactivate accounts for users under 16, prevent kids registering new accounts, check ages, and also prevent workarounds to bypass the restrictions. The government said platforms would be exempt if they had the primary purpose of: Messaging, emailing, voice calling or video calling. Playing online games. Sharing information about products or services. Professional networking or professional development. Education. Health. Communication between educational institutions and students or their families. Facilitating communication between providers of healthcare and people using those providers' services. It will be up to the eSafety commissioner to determine which platforms meet the criteria for an exemption. In practice, this means that LinkedIn, WhatsApp, Roblox, and Coursera would likely be exempt if assessed to meet the criteria. LinkedIn had previously argued to the government it was not of interest to children. In theory, it could also mean YouTube Kids could be exempt from the ban if it meets the criteria for an exemption, given it does not allow comments on videos. But the government has not confirmed this, and YouTube has not commented on whether it would seek an exemption for its service designed for children. Platforms that have not been named by the government but do not meet the exemption criteria will also need to consider whether they need to bring in age assurance by December. This would include services like Bluesky, Donald Trump's Truth Social platform, Discord and Twitch. A common misconception about the social media ban is that it will only apply to children. In order to ensure teens remain off social media, the platforms will need to check the ages of all user accounts in Australia. How they will do that is not prescribed, but it will be informed by the outcome of the age assurance technology trial, the full report of which is due in August. The government has legislated that although ID checks can be one form of age assurance, it can't be the only one accepted. It's expected Australia will follow a similar path for age assurance that launched in the UK in July, which includes options such as: Allowing banks and mobile providers to confirm a user is over 18. Asking site users to upload a photo that is then matched with photo ID. Use of facial age estimation technology. In addition to that, platforms could potentially infer user ages based on account behaviour or age. For example, if you signed up for Facebook in 2009, you would be over 16 by now. YouTube has also flagged it will use artificial intelligence to determine user ages. Albanese has compared the social media ban to alcohol restrictions, and said there will no doubt be children who manage to get around the ban, but he argued it was still worth doing. In the UK, where age verification was brought in this week for accessing pornography websites, there has been a surge in people using virtual private networks (VPNs), which hide a user's real location, enabling access to blocked websites. Four of the top five free apps on the Apple app store in the UK on Thursday were VPN apps, with Proton, the most popular, reporting a 1,800% increase in downloads. The Australian government has said it expects the platforms will implement 'reasonable steps' to account for how teens may seek to avoid the ban. Platforms that do not take what the eSafety commissioner determines to be 'reasonable steps' to keep kids off their service can face a fine of up to $49.5m that will be determined in the federal court. What 'reasonable steps' means will be up to the commissioner to determine. When asked on Wednesday, Wells said: 'I think reasonable steps is reasonable.' 'These are meant to be working rules, and they also need to sort of correct any errors as they arise. Because these are not set-and-forget rules, these are set-and-support rules. They are world-leading. But this is manifestly too important for us not to have a crack.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store