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Push to give TAFE students HECS loans
Jessica Irvine
April 19, 2007
Jessica Irvine
April 19, 2007
STUDENTS in vocational courses should be able to use the Federal Government's HECS loan system to cope with increasing up-front fees, a paper authored by one of the architects of the scheme claims.
Launched yesterday by the Treasury secretary Ken Henry, the paper dispelled the myth that TAFE graduates, who typically earn lower incomes, would take too long to repay the debts.
In fact, a male student completing a two-year diploma course could be expected to start repaying his loan five years after graduation, repaying it within two years. Female students would take seven years because their average earnings were lower.
The study authors, including the ANU professor Bruce Chapman, who advised on the design of the HECS scheme in 1989, found that TAFE students would be just as capable of repaying as their university counterparts.
Failure to make loans available could be a "significant barrier" to low-income students, given the steep rise in up-front fees, particularly in courses using expensive materials or specialist teaching staff.
A diploma of multimedia could cost as much as $6060, aromatherapy $4000 and a certificate in commercial cookery $3167 for just six months.
After a recent decision to extend HECS loans to private universities, the report warns that continuing to exclude students in the TAFE system could jeopardise its future.
"This could mean that eventually TAFE would be crowded out by private-sector alternatives and cease to be viable as an educational institution."
Overlapping state and federal responsibilities for the TAFE system could delay reform, the report warned.
Dr Henry, who has been at the centre of controversy this month when an internal speech critical of the Government was leaked, emphasised the report did not necessarily reflect the views of Treasury.
However, "anybody with an interest in the public policy question of what higher education, particularly at the technical level, can contribute to lifting the skills base in Australia … really should read this paper", he said.