How student debt changes made the same degrees more expensive
While the Albanese government will move to legislate a 20 per cent discount after winning the federal election, tertiary analysts say adjustments to how much students pay for their degree is likely to be years away.
Under former Prime Minister Scott Morrison's controversial Job-ready Graduates program, the cost of a humanities degree rose to $50,000.
The current government says it wants to look at fee reform but rather than change now, it will take advice on fees from the yet-to-be-opened Australian Tertiary Education Commission. It will be fully operational by January 2026.
Monash University higher education policy researcher Professor Andrew Norton said the government had prioritised a 20 per cent reduction in existing HECS bills because it was a simple and concise political message. 'And that's what they got with a 20 per cent HECS reduction,' he said.
'They have not fixed the underlying issue … it is unlikely we'll see any fee changes until 2027.'
Education Minister Jason Clare describes the issue slightly differently: he says they are taking a 'staged' approach to reforming the cost of degree, with changes starting to make debt indexation fairer.
'Second, we are cutting student debt by 20 per cent,' he said.
The 20 per cent reduction will be calculated based on what a person's debt amount was as at June 1, 2025, before indexation was applied.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

ABC News
6 hours ago
- ABC News
Aussie jobs on agenda for PM's China trip
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese is preparing to meet with China's leaders over a six-day trip, which he says he'll use to boost economic ties and build job opportunities for Australia.

Sky News AU
11 hours ago
- Sky News AU
Albanese backs Wong on concerns of China's rapidly expanding military
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese is showing his support for Foreign Minister Penny Wong as she made remarks about China's rapidly expanding military. Mr Albanese is positioning his upcoming visit to China as a critical moment for Australia's economy. Ms Wong has spoken on the importance of a region where no country dominates and where there is a balance of power. 'Wong speaks as Australia's Foreign Minister and never speaks in any other capacity than that, and she does a fantastic job,' Mr Albanese said. The Trump administration is urging Australia to take a tougher stance on Beijing, especially on military and security issues. This comes as Prime Minister Albanese will spend six days in China to meet Chinese President Xi Jinping.

Sydney Morning Herald
12 hours ago
- Sydney Morning Herald
Albanese on US alliance: ‘We aren't subservient'
Anthony Albanese has declared Australia must not be subservient to its allies as his government pushes back on a possible US demand to guarantee the use of AUKUS submarines in any conflict with China on the eve of his trip to that country. In remarks from a private question-and-answer session after a speech on Saturday, where the prime minister was emphasising Australian sovereignty, Albanese said the US alliance was crucial before going further than his prepared remarks. 'In the strategic competition that's there in the world, we're with the United States,' Albanese said at the John Curtin Research Centre. 'We're with democratic countries. We don't shy away from that at all, of where our alliances are. 'I'm a supporter of AUKUS, that's important,' Albanese said in a recording obtained by this masthead. 'But that doesn't mean that we are subservient to any other country.' Albanese's talk was delivered as the government encounters pressure from the US on tariffs, defence spending and the AUKUS pact that is under review by a senior Pentagon official, and noted China hawk, Elbridge Colby. This masthead reported on Thursday that Colby, the under-secretary of defence for policy, had told Australian sources that the nation should give a public declaration or private guarantee that US-made nuclear submarines it receives from the AUKUS pact would be used in a possible conflict with China. The demand is contentious as it would limit Australia's sovereignty. It is not yet clear if such a demand would form part of the review's recommendations, with foreign policy chaos a feature of the Trump administration. A spokesman for the Australian Defence Department said the government had 'made clear [that] Australia will always make sovereign, independent decisions based on Australia's national interest, including what capabilities Australia acquires and how they are employed.'