Chapter 4 Impediments to incoming researchers
4.1
This chapter examines the role that is played by researchers coming to
Australia from overseas, and impediments faced by incoming researchers. The
chapter examines the following issues:
n Incoming researcher trends
and the benefits of incoming researchers
n Visa and immigration
difficulties
n Additional costs for
incoming researchers.
Trends and benefits
4.2
There have been many emerging trends identified in researcher
development and mobility throughout the course of the inquiry.
4.3
While Australia benefits from sending its researchers overseas to forge
links with their colleagues, another method for fostering international
research collaboration is to have researchers brought into Australia to
collaborate with their counterparts.
4.4
Bringing researchers into Australia to collaborate with their
counterparts can have several advantages over sending Australians overseas.
4.5
It can take advantage of foreign sources of funding with overseas
researchers using their grant funding to travel to Australia, which provides a
saving for Australia. It can also allow foreign researchers to take advantage
of the expertise of Australian researchers and to gain an understanding of
Australia, and also showcase Australia as a potential place for an overseas
researcher to take their skills as a permanent resident or citizen.
4.6
The Committee also heard that foreign researchers may also be drawn to Australia
to take advantage of some of its unique features that will enhance their
research, such as climate, or to use world class facilities, instruments or equipment
only available in Australia.[1]
4.7
It was also reported that a number of international researchers had
chosen after studying or working in Australia to remain in Australia
permanently as skilled migrants.[2]
4.8
One witness suggested that bringing researchers into Australia had
approximately the same value as sending an Australian researcher overseas to
collaborate on a research project.[3]
4.9
Bringing foreign researchers into Australia to tap into their expertise
was also examined through the lens of talent recruitment. The University of
Adelaide (UoA) noted that Australia would be more able to compete with the rest
of the world in recruiting intellectual talent by embracing overseas PhD
students to improve Australia’s global competitiveness,[4]
a point supported by the Group of Eight.[5]
4.10
Recent trends in intake of researchers from overseas were discussed:
Whereas we used to have a large number of North American and
European, particularly German, postgraduate doctoral fellows come to Australian
universities, it has almost dried up. Our postdoctoral fellows now come from
developing countries. The interaction between the top laboratories in the US,
Germany and Britain that we used to have has become more difficult because we
are not exchanging our younger people between these laboratories.[6]
4.11
Witnesses had observed Australia had lost researchers to other
countries, due to better opportunities being available overseas.[7]
The Committee also heard that a trend had emerged in which the number of
domestic students undertaking PhDs had been in decline, leading to a situation
in which there were more international than local students undertaking PhDs.[8]
As a result of this trend senior Australian researchers were now seeking to
access PhD students from other countries:
… in many science and technology areas it is extremely hard to
find domestic students to do PhDs. That is one reason that researchers are
driven to get their PhD students from other countries.[9]
4.12
This practice has some clear benefits for senior Australian researchers.
It was identified by some as being a way of addressing the trend of talented
Australian academics heading overseas, commonly called the “brain drain”.[10]
4.13
The Committee heard from several witnesses that incoming foreign
researchers played an important role in revitalising their organisations,
because as senior staff were approaching retirement age, there were risks that there
were few domestic researchers able to replace them.[11]
4.14
Instead, these organisations saw foreign researchers as a potential
salvation, as did many submitters. Bringing researchers in from the
Asia-Pacific region has the potential to build relationships and increase the
face to face meetings and networking opportunities that are vital in
establishing research collaboration.
4.15
The World Vegetable Centre based in Taipei, noted the value for Australia
and for the region in having the next generation of scientists sourced from
both a domestic and foreign intake:
Declining horticultural enrolments by Australian nationals in
Australian universities mean that the next generation of scientists to work in
Australian departments of agriculture and universities are more likely to come
from overseas. Strengthening research collaboration now can help ensure that
future graduates of overseas universities have the skills, background and
expertise that is most likely to be of value to Australia in the future.[12]
4.16
The Committee was advised that even if overseas PhDs did not stay in
Australia after their graduation they would become people of influence in their
countries of origin with strong links to Australia.[13]
One witness noted that overseas PhDs contributed a net benefit to Australia:
I think any PhD students that we get here do tend to be of
net benefit to Australia, regardless of whether they stay or go back. They have
connections. There has been research done on this. It is really an important
part of our relationship. I think what we and most other universities are
trying to do is bring our research training recruitment much more in line with
where our research strengths are and to develop that in a broader kind of
relationship.[14]
4.17
These potential benefits were also explored by the NTEU:
… when students – whether they be undergraduate, postgraduate
or higher degree research students – come to study in Australia they have got
that connection. When they go back to their home countries, I think it is
important to try and maintain those links. Those sorts of links are really
useful, I think, and actually support the whole agenda in terms of increasing
the level of research collaboration which I think will happen as the numbers of
international students increase over the years.[15]
4.18
Professor Fiona Stanley AC advised that she had successfully brought
researchers in from overseas to work on projects, and though many had returned
to their countries of origin they still played a positive role for
Australia-based research:
I have had considerable success in recruiting people here to
Western Australia to four to five years of their careers. They have been
headhunted – bugger it! – back to the UK or Canada for chairs. But that is good
because we get at least four or five years of them when they are most
productive and then they have gone back and they continue to be ambassadors. So
to have visiting people come here is a hugely important aspect of all of this,
not just for us to go there, because that cements the relationships.[16]
4.19
The Committee also heard that Australian research strengths and the
offering of scholarships[17] had attracted overseas
researchers to Australia to work. Witnesses from Dairy Australia noted that a
Chair at Monash University supported by Dairy Australia had been filled by an
academic from Auckland University in New Zealand. The witnesses added:
When you attract a chair, you attract their students and some
of their team as well, so you get that transfer of a team.[18]
Committee comment
4.20
The Committee notes the benefits that incoming researchers have had to
the development of Australian scientists and research, and believes that if
Australian researchers are unable to travel overseas to learn from gifted
researchers, that research organisations should aim to bring experts in from
overseas, even for short periods of time, to maximise the exposure of young
researchers to world class scientists and to take advantage of their expertise.
4.21
Australia is clearly home to several world class scientific facilities,
and these facilities are a great incentive for foreign researchers. These
facilities give Australia a comparative advantage in fields like nuclear
science and astronomy, and facilitate researcher mobility and the exposure of
young researchers to global science.
4.22
Maximising the exposure to foreign researchers has clearly had benefits
to Australian research. While evidence indicates that Australia is receiving
less researchers from Europe, it now appears to be bringing in more researchers
from the Asia-Pacific region. While this has both advantages and disadvantages,
it marks Australia as a potential regional research hub.
4.23
While Australia has historically seen its best academic talent move to
the United States and Europe, it has quite often been able to replenish those
stocks with young up and coming researchers. However, the sciences have seen
less PhD candidates in recent years, and with an ageing research workforce,
Australian research organisations and universities have been compelled to look
at recruiting researchers from overseas.
4.24
Aside from addressing personnel shortages, bringing in PhD candidates
from overseas has clear advantages for Australia if domestic students are
unable or unwilling to fill available places. Accepting international PhD
students can open up opportunities for research collaboration back in the
researcher’s country of origin, or at the very least improve networks between
research institutions. Quite often, talented researchers have elected to remain
in Australia as permanent residents, keeping their expertise in Australia.
Visas and immigration difficulties
4.25
One area that was clearly identified by many witnesses and submitters[19]
as an area in which the Australian government could increase support for
research collaboration at little cost was to revise a bureaucratic[20]
or ‘rigid and difficult’[21] visa system.[22]
4.26
The Committee heard many examples of onerous visa requirements or
extended delays in processing for experienced researchers or high quality PhD
candidates from a range of countries, which had posed a major impediment to
international research collaboration.[23]
4.27
Witnesses advised that the visa application process often took a long
time. A witness advised the Committee that his organisation operated on the
assumption that the process would take approximately 12 months.[24]
4.28
Visa applicants were rejected from a variety of countries of origin,
some considered high risk for overstaying, and others considered low risk.
These countries of origin included Germany,[25] Argentina,[26]
Canada,[27] Pakistan[28]
and China[29] sometimes without any
explanation. An unexplained rejection of a visa application was reported to
have caused significant embarrassment when an eminent researcher was refused
entry to Australia.[30]
4.29
The Committee was told of a situation in which an eminent Chinese
researcher was only able to get a visa after direct lobbying at the Australian
embassy by an Australian researcher who happened to be in China at the time:
… I was attending a workshop in Beijing at one time and we
had a famous member of the Chinese Academy of Sciences who wanted to come to
Australia for six months to visit ANU and the University of New South Wales,
where I was located at the time. While we were having a workshop there he got a
letter from the Australian embassy saying his application had been rejected. Because
I happened to be there, I rang the Australian embassy and they told me ‘Oh no,
we reject everybody from China who wants to stay more than three months.’ I
said ‘You probably don’t know who this person is but he is a very eminent
scientist who has done a lot of work in Australia and wants to continue working
with Australians.’ So I followed it up with them and we got it through, but I
think it is probably because I was there and I was able to ring up people. I
did not see his application so I do not know what was in it, but it shocked me
that he just got a straight no because he wanted to stay more than three months
and he was Chinese.[31]
4.30
Visa problems caused trouble for the vast majority of witnesses, both in
universities and in other areas of research and for both short[32]
and long term visas.
4.31
The University of New South Wales reported that they had established a
bilateral relationship with a university in China that had been adversely
impacted by the current visa system:
Visa requirements for Australian and Chinese academics and
students for short stays in China and Australia (up to 6 months), respectively,
are very onerous and have directly affected the core partnerships associated
with the recently established UNSW Confucius Institute in partnership with
Shanghai Jiao Tong University in China.[33]
4.32
Delays in processing researcher visa applications by the Department of
Immigration and Citizenship had, in one case, forced a witness from AMSI to use
a migration agent to accelerate the process:
I have had a lot of postdoctoral research associates come
from overseas and at some stage we had two options: we could go through the
usual channels at the university, and then it would take longer but if we paid
extra then there was some sort of consultant who manoeuvred the way or
something like that.[34]
4.33
The application process was also questioned:
[The invitee] is then in the position of having to write a
paragraph or a page about why his visit to Australia will benefit Australia and
I think that is unnecessary. I do not understand why it is necessary to even
have that question asked. I am not sure that anyone actually evaluates the
answer to that question or is qualified to evaluate the answer to that
question, and it is really not part of the essential core of the immigration
process. I think that could easily be eliminated or modified without relaxing
Australia’s broader security issues.[35]
4.34
The Committee was also told of an unusual case where Department of
Foreign Affairs and Trade officials questioned a host institution regarding a
proposed visit by a researcher from India. The host institution, the Centre for
Antimatter-Matter Studies, was under the impression that, after the discussions
and questions, any issues had been resolved. CAMS was surprised to subsequently
find that the visa for the visiting researcher was refused.[36]
4.35
CAMS added:
It’s extremely embarrassing. As I said, we have a bilateral
research program with India that is administered through the Academy of Science
… I found it most unusual at the time.[37]
4.36
CAMS was concerned that any future proposed visit by that researcher
would be in doubt, with a refusal existing on that person’s record.[38]
4.37
CAMS also provided an example of a researcher that had experienced a
significant delay in obtaining a visa:
We have had a lot of delays recently, I might add,
particularly from one of my colleagues from the US. He had to cool his heels
for a week in New Zealand because the visa did not come through in five weeks …
It is embarrassing. He was treated, in my view—I should be careful—poorly. Yes,
he was treated poorly. It does not do our image as international science
collaborators or as a country any good.[39]
4.38
Evidence was also presented that some promising international students
were unable to take up PhD scholarships due to visa difficulties:
It is not just the visa, it is also the visa requirement for
evidence of a very large amount of money now. Since most of our PhD students
are coming in on scholarships that are funded by the universities – and that is
a very limited amount of money – it really makes it almost impossible for some
students to take those up.[40]
4.39
The role Australia plays as a leader in research in the Asia-Pacific and
the diplomatic and aid benefits that can flow from collaboration have also been
potentially damaged by problems with visas. The Committee heard that difficulty
obtaining visas had impacted on a researcher from Papua New Guinea attending a
conference in a third country:
We have a very strong relationship with the Institute of
Medical Research in Papua New Guinea, and some of the visa arrangements there
have been absolutely pathetic. We have just had an experience with one of the
top PhD students from that institute, an indigenous Papua New Guinean. We
wanted him to go to a conference in Italy on pneumococcal disease, which all of
our people were presenting at, and he had to come via Australia. Australia
would not give him a visa in time to get him to Italy, so he did not go to the
meeting … The fact is that he would not have become an illegal immigrant. He
has been on a student visa. Now he is a postdoc. It was unacceptable.[41]
4.40
Many witnesses that discussed visa difficulties indicated that decisions
by the Department of Immigration and Citizenship to reject visa applications
from applicants at the PhD candidate level or higher were disappointing. The
witnesses were upset that applications from dependable academics, who were
coming to Australia only to work on research projects and were no risk of
overstaying had their applications rejected.[42]
4.41
Witnesses noted that there was a difference between PhD candidates and
students studying at other levels, noting that Universities were discerning in
offering PhD places to all students[43], and they had to have
research proposals approved before they were offered a place.[44]
4.42
A witness from Monash University compared bringing in overseas
researchers to hiring highly skilled workers coming to Australia to do a
particular job.[45]
4.43
Another witness agreed that officials from the Department of Immigration
and Citizenship should look more favourably on applications from highly
qualified academics and PhD candidates:
… we should assume that they are going to be beneficial in
the main. That makes commonsense. The majority of the scientific community
would like to see almost immediate granting of visas where the nature of the
visit is quite clear and there are not expected to be any unusual problems.[46]
4.44
Visa difficulties did not just prevent researchers from coming to
Australia. The Committee heard that some eminent researchers and academics had
refused to come back to Australia after experiencing so many difficulties in
getting to Australia in the first instance.[47]
4.45
Victoria University noted there was already a visa category for PhD and
visiting scholars, but noted the rigid processes and long processing times were
the primary impediments to bringing researchers in on this visa class.[48]
4.46
Another witness noted that in the past, when they had been seeking to
bring academics in for short-term visits that they would just use tourist
visas, but over the past few years, there had been an increase in use of the
419 (Visiting Academic) visa subclass.[49]
4.47
The cost of applying for 419 visa was discussed, and a witness
considered the approximately $250 cost expensive, as there were often additional
costs incurred to obtain certified copies of documents, registered postage and
travel to the Australian consulate.[50]
4.48
By way of contrast, the Committee asked several witnesses about their
experiences travelling abroad asking about visa processing times. Professor
Adrian Baddeley reported:
For a visit of less than six months I have usually turned up
at the airport without any paperwork and been admitted to the UK, the
Netherlands, the United States, Canada and so forth. For some other countries I
have been a bit more circumspect to make sure that I have got some kind of
documentation … it would be rare for me to take more than a month to get
everything together.[51]
4.49
Having been asked whether he had experienced similar visa frustrations
when heading overseas, Dr Mehmet Cakir replied:
Actually, no, I must admit. The countries that I have
visited, no. The only visa that I had to get from here was the one when I was
going to China a few months ago. Otherwise, every other country that I went to,
if there was a visa, I got it on the border. It was just quick, yes; no
problem.[52]
4.50
The Department of Immigration and Citizenship (DIAC) gave evidence to
the inquiry. DIAC found it regrettable that immigration processes were an
impediment to research:
We are really sorry that some academics have experienced
delays and that they see immigration procedures as a major impediment to
international research collaboration. Of course, that was never our intention.
We do have our role in terms of implementing government policy to have an
orderly managed migration program and to protect our community from all sorts
of risks—health, character and all of that. But we would not want to impose any
more red tape than is absolutely necessary.[53]
4.51
DIAC explained recent changes in visa sub-class requirements:
Recent changes have applied from 14 September 2009 under the
worker protection framework. New sponsorship requirements were introduced to a
range of 400 visas to align with the 457 changes. That included changes to the
visiting academic subclass 419 visa to apply the sponsorship requirements. The
reason for applying the sponsorship requirements to the 419 visiting academic
visa was that there was a review in 2002 that was commissioned by the then
government and then Minister Philip Ruddock, which asked an external reference
group—a very prominent external group—to recommend changes to a range of small
boutique visas, such as those in the 450 series, including the visiting
academic visa. That 2002 review recommended that subclass 419 should not be
exempt from sponsorship requirements that should generally be required across
the visa categories in that 400 series. The reason for that was that we needed
a standardised approach across all temporary work visas to reduce the
complexity found in having differentials for different visas. As you know, we
have 149 visa subclasses. We needed to apply consistent rules to introduce some
simplification and to reduce the client confusion and administrative
inefficiency.[54]
4.52
DIAC admitted that, as with any changes, there had been teething
problems in the first couple of months since implementation. DIAC explained further:
I think that when we change the way we process visas there is
always an appearance of there being a problem, because it takes people a while
to get used to a new process. In fact, the average processing times for the
nomination and the visa are not substantially longer. The ones cited in the
submissions are the outliers. What has been reported is people whose visas are
taking an extremely long time. Whereas there are a lot of visas processed that
are delivered within service standards—that is, less than three months.[55]
4.53
In the light of recent visa changes, DIAC discussed the roles of the
applicant and sponsor:
With the recent changes introducing the sponsorship
requirements and under the workers protection legislation we do not think we
have added any more compliance steps for the visa applicant. What we have done
is shift some of the compliance and administration effort from the applicant to
the universities and education facilities and their human resources sections.
Some of the questions we previously asked are now in the nomination sponsorship
stage, and that is clearly the responsibility of the universities and their
human resources sections. The effort required by the applicant in answering the
questions on the form has now been reduced.[56]
4.54
DIAC further explained the role for host institutions, and discussed a
new information campaign:
We are hearing concerns raised by the universities because I
do not think their human resource sections are using the visa pathways as they
should and on occasion they do not have all the information. Over the next few
weeks we will be engaging with Universities Australia on an information and
education awareness raising campaign. We will be also be working closely with
Universities Australia to look at what we can do within the current legislative
arrangements to simplify the process for the benefit of low-risk education
institutions and low-risk applicants.[57]
4.55
How recently this education awareness initiative was established was not
discussed.
4.56
DIAC suggested that visa applicants were choosing the wrong sub-class of
visa for their visit:
When I read some of the concerns that were raised and some of
the examples that were mentioned, clearly those examples point to the fact that
they were using wrong visa pathway.[58]
4.57
In discussions concerning quicker visa processing for hosts with proven
track records of sponsoring people in and out of the country successfully, DIAC
stated:
We will do that as part of our risk-management framework.
That is what we are doing with the 457 visa. We will have low-risk sponsors
with much more streamlined requirements. The same will happen across the 400
visa series—low-risk sponsors who have an established track record in complying
with the obligations will have a much more streamlined process. That is exactly
the way forward from now on and that is what we are going to do in consultation
with Universities Australia.[59]
4.58
DIAC explained that the visa nomination, rather than the application,
requires the documentation of what the benefit to Australia will be as a result
of a particular person’s visit. When asked whether the department has qualified
people able to assess the scientific benefit to Australia, DIAC stated that
they do not have staff with specific training in research and academics.[60]
4.59
DIAC further explained the need for such questions:
I think the benefit to Australia is a standard question that
applies across the visa categories. It is part of the overall integrity
framework. We require the sponsors and applicants to explain in what way it
will benefit Australia if we grant the visa. It is part of the overall
decision-making process. It is one of the many questions that we put to
sponsors and applicants.
I understand the concerns but, as I said, it is part of the
overall risk-management framework and the decision-making process. Members
would be surprised how many integrity issues we have come across by asking all
sorts of questions that on the face of it might not sound reasonable, but these
questions and the responses provide a trigger for further investigation and the
overall risk management.[61]
Committee comment
4.60
The Committee was disappointed to hear that promising PhD students were
unable to take up scholarships due to an inability to obtain a visa. Further,
the Committee heard of cases where academics with a higher level of
qualification were unable to enter the country to take up positions due to
having their visa applications rejected.
4.61
The Committee was alarmed to hear that research organisations had so
much trouble bringing researchers in from overseas due to problems with visas.
That research collaboration opportunities have been lost due to bureaucracy and
delay is extremely regrettable and the Committee hopes that these instances
will be lessened and eventually eradicated.
4.62
The Committee heard substantial evidence that universities had had
trouble bringing researchers in on 419 class visas. The Committee was indeed
surprised to learn from the Department of Immigration and Citizenship that many
universities have been using the wrong visa subclass and should have been using
the 457 visa instead.
4.63
While the Committee is heartened to learn that the Department of
Immigration and Citizenship anticipates applications under the 457 visa class
should be processed faster, it is extremely disappointed that the Department
did nothing to address the misconception many universities were under that the
419 visa was the only one applicable for their use. Accordingly, the Committee
recommends that the Department of Immigration and Citizenship make formal contact
with the human resources sections of all relevant universities and research institutions
explaining the most appropriate visa that should be used for visiting
researchers.
Recommendation 2
|
|
The Committee recommends that the Department of Immigration
and Citizenship make formal contact with the human resources sections of all
relevant universities and research institutions explaining the most
appropriate visa that should be used for visiting researchers.
|
4.64
The Committee also remains concerned that visa application processes
take far too long. Opportunities for collaboration have been lost due to the
long lead time on visa application processes. That some research organisations
operate on the assumption that a visa application will take 12 months until
final approval indicates that there are significant concerns in the academic
community about processing times. Closer relationships and more communication
between research bodies and the Department of Immigration and Citizenship would
improve processing times and the confidence of academia in the Department’s
processes. Further, it would mean more opportunities for problems with
applications to be addressed.
4.65
Accordingly, the Committee recommends that the Department of Immigration
and Citizenship remain in close contact with the human resource departments of
universities and research institutions that are responsible for visa
applications, reporting to these bodies monthly on the progress of active visa
applications.
Recommendation 3
|
|
The Committee recommends that the Department of Immigration
and Citizenship remain in close contact with the human resource departments
of universities and research institutions that are responsible for visa applications,
reporting to these bodies monthly on the progress of active visa
applications.
|
4.66
Universities and research institutes undertake serious vetting of the
academic qualifications of applicants, and ensure that applicants have approved
research proposals before being offered a place.
4.67
Academics identified as having useful contributions to make by
universities are unlikely to overstay their visas, as they are trusted members
of the scientific community with clear ties in their countries of origin.
4.68
The Committee has drawn the perception from the evidence that visa
applicants from certain countries considered to be “high risk” have had their
applications rejected solely due to the length of the visa and the nationality
of the applicant. That this perception even exists amongst witnesses and
submitters is unacceptable. As Australia becomes more of a hub for research
collaboration in the Asia-Pacific, more researchers will continue to come from
non-European, and more “high-risk” sources. The Department of Immigration and
Citizenship must do more to address this perception and to consider visa
applications on their merits, making special note of the sponsoring
organisation and the risk assessments already performed by the academic body
sponsoring the application.
4.69
The Committee heard evidence on the application process. It was advised
that visa applications required the applicant (or sponsor, depending on who was
filling out the application) to inform the Department of Immigration and
Citizenship on how the researcher’s visit would benefit Australia.
4.70
The Department of Immigration and Citizenship was asked whether any
departmental staff were qualified to assess the merits of these applications,
and the Committee was informed that this was not the case. As there are no
Immigration staff qualified to assess the merits of the statements on visa
applications, the Committee believes this portion of the application to be of
little use to either Department of Immigration and Citizenship or the
applicant.
4.71
The Committee was surprised and somewhat puzzled that Department of
Foreign Affairs and Trade officials had also been involved in scrutinising
particular applications. The Committee is of the opinion that the role of this
department in assessing migration visa applications should be clarified.
4.72
Accordingly, the Committee recommends that the Department of Immigration
and Citizenship streamline the visa application process for visiting
researchers by replacing the section that requires applicants to detail the
benefits to Australia of their planned visit with a simplified section
consisting of check boxes containing common reasons for academic visits.
Recommendation 4
|
|
The Committee recommends that the Department of Immigration
and Citizenship streamline the visa application process for visiting
researchers by replacing the section that requires applicants to detail the
benefits to Australia of their planned visit with a simplified section
consisting of check boxes containing common reasons for academic visits.
|
Additional costs for incoming researchers
4.73
Overseas researchers working in Australia also are subject to additional
costs that are generally not supported by research grants or the sponsoring
research institution, with witnesses identifying a need to not only facilitate
the transfer of researchers to Australia, but to also ensure they are not
subject to excessive additional costs.[62]
4.74
Witnesses and submitters noted several financial barriers to bringing
researchers in from overseas, including health insurance,[63]
school fees, and non-resident tax rates.
4.75
Researchers who choose to bring their families out to Australia with
them are met with expenses for school fees, even if they choose to enrol their
children in public schools.[64] Imposing sizeable school
fees on visiting researchers can act as a disincentive, especially if the
researcher has several children.[65]
4.76
This extra expense has the potential to reduce Australia’s
competitiveness as a destination for overseas researchers:
[School fees] can be quite substantial. They are about $5,000
a year for a primary school in New South Wales, for example, and this can be
quite off-putting for somebody considering coming to Australia versus some
other part of the world where that is not a serious constraint to them.[66]
4.77
In its submission, James Cook University noted that New Zealand had
eliminated fees for research students, and encouraged Australia to do the same.
Australian universities should be further assisted to attract
the highest calibre international research students. Such students are
operating in a genuinely global market for the enrolment; it does not serve
Australia well to discourage them through high costs.[67]
4.78
Some research institutions covered the education expenses of the
children of their overseas researchers:
One of the appointees we have made from Austria – and this is
the first I have become aware of this – has two primary school age children,
and suddenly we are up for $10,000 in fees for the children. I am paying that
out of our budget, so that is a cost I do not really welcome being added to us.[68]
4.79
Another issue identified as an impediment to visiting researchers was
non-resident tax rates. High non-resident tax rates can clearly act as a
disincentive for researchers to visit Australia. While tax rates were reduced
when the visiting researchers secured tax file numbers, they still paid higher
taxes than their domestic counterparts. The disincentive was particularly true
for younger researchers, who didn’t earn the same salaries as their more senior
counterparts:
It is actually very difficult for young international
scientists and researchers to come to Australia. It is difficult because of our
taxation system. When they come here they pay a higher tax rate than Australians
because of their non-resident status. And until they get a tax file number it
can be extremely high. But even then, after getting a tax file number, it is
still a much higher tax rate than their Australian counterparts pay. These are
people with young families. They are in their early 30s. They are not on high
salaries.[69]
4.80
Combining the issues of taxation and school fees, a witness added:
It just seems to me that, if the person is here and paying
taxes, they should be eligible for the benefits that other Australians who pay taxes
get.[70]
Committee comment
4.81
The additional costs faced by visiting researchers also serve as a clear
disincentive to research collaboration. Even once a researcher has secured a
tax file number they still pay a higher rate of tax placing more strain on young
researchers who earn less than their senior counterparts. The Committee
understands the rationale behind higher tax rates for non-residents but
considers it unfair for taxpayers, Australian residents or not, to be unable to
access free public education for their children.
4.82
Recognising that taxpayers in the Australian tax system have the right
to access free public education for their children, the Committee recommends that
the federal Minister for Education formulate a proposal for consideration
through COAG recommending that visiting researchers that have an Australian tax
file number and are contracted to work on research projects for more than six
months be eligible to receive public education for all school age children.
Recommendation 5
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The Committee recommends that the federal Minister for
Education formulate a proposal for consideration through COAG recommending that
visiting researchers that have an Australian tax file number and are
contracted to work on research projects for more than six months be eligible
to receive public education for all school age children.
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