Additional Comments by the Australian Greens

Additional Comments by the Australian Greens

At a time when young people are under increasing financial pressure, students need to be better supported if they are to stay on and excel in their chosen path.

The need for adequate student income support is particularly acute for those who have no choice but to leave home to take their place in higher education and fulfil the potential they have demonstrated by earning that university place.

The Australian Greens agree with Senator Nash in wanting to see a fairer student income support system which eliminates discrimination against country students, but believe that this Private Senator’s Bill does not go to the heart of the problem.

While we understand what this bill is trying to achieve, and agree that the current system of student income support is discriminatory – it unfortunately only offers a band-aid solution which still discriminates against country students.

Forcing students to defer their studies for a year in order to get proper support to access tertiary education is not the right approach.

Last year, after a prolonged stand-off in Federal Parliament, the Greens were able to successfully negotiate a better deal for students with the Government’s Youth Allowance package.  

We achieved:

However, despite achieving many key concessions, an agreement struck with the Coalition meant that the old system of Youth Allowance was returned only to those students from outer regional, remote and very remote areas, whose parents’ combined income was less than $150,000.

The problem with this agreement was that the determination of who qualifies as outer regional, remote or very remote depends solely on lines on a map.

Towns in Inner Regional areas were not eligible because of their perceived lack of remoteness. Numerous regional centres, including some which are long distances from tertiary education institutions, are listed as inner regional. Key regional centres and towns which miss out under the current model include: Mt Gambier (which is more than four hours from university campuses in Adelaide and between four and six hours from campuses in Victoria), Albury, Wagga Wagga, Orange, Dubbo, Port Macquarie, Tamworth, Mackay, Rockhampton, Launceston and Bunbury.

While I understand that Senator Nash’s Bill would deal with this problem by putting Inner Regional towns back to the old workforce participation criteria - it would still unfortunately force country students to defer their studies for up to two years.

One of our key concerns is the fact that only 30 per cent of country students who defer studies go on to university.

Instead of going back to an old, flawed system, the solution is to remove the need for young people to defer their studies and work full-time to meet the criteria to secure the necessary income support. There needs to be a commitment from government, to allow students who have to move out of home to access courses to get the independent rate of Youth Allowance.

The Greens have an alternate policy that would use a simple test – students who have to relocate more than 90 minutes out of home to study, and whose parents have a combined income of less than $150,000 would qualify as independent for the purposes of Youth Allowance.

Treasury costings on the Greens policy show that for just over $200 million a year over the forward estimates, we can have a system of student income support that no longer works discriminates against young rural and regional Australians from getting a tertiary education

Our policy would provide access to Youth Allowance to an additional 23,843 students who did not previously qualify, plus 15,779 students who already were eligible for Youth Allowance under the current system, but who received a lesser amount under the current system.

Recommendation:

The Greens recommend that this Bill be amended to reflect our fully costed proposal.

Senator Hanson-Young
Australian Greens' Spokesperson for Education.

Navigation: Previous Page | Contents | Next Page