International education generates AUD $53.6bn in Australian export income
The figure highlights the growing economic significance of international students, with education-related travel now Australia’s largest services export, rising around 5% compared with the previous year.
Commenting on the latest figures, Universities Australia said in a statement: “International education just keeps delivering for our country. It supports jobs in every state and territory. It drives investment into local communities. It keeps strengthening our global ties. And it supports teaching and research in our universities. It’s one of our nation’s great success stories.”
However, Universities Australia also noted that the latest data “reinforces what’s at stake”.
“At the very moment education is delivering for the economy, the sector is operating under continued policy pressure – slower visa processing, further increases to visa fees and ongoing uncertainty about future settings. We can’t continue to treat one of our strongest exports as a political football. If we want this success story to continue, we need stable, predictable and globally competitive policy settings.
“Other countries are competing hard for talent and investment. Australia should be backing one of the sectors that consistently backs Australia,” it added.
Other countries are competing hard for talent and investment. Australia should be backing one of the sectors that consistently backs Australia
Universities Australia
Earlier this month, the Albanese government doubled the application fee for its post-study work visa, increasing the cost from AUD $2,300 to AUD $4,600, prompting sector bodies to speak out against the decision, describing it as an “unfair financial burden” on international graduates.
The change comes as recent analysis shows how international students are keeping the sector afloat amid soaring university deficits.
Over 40% of Australia’s universities have spent most of the past five years in deficit, according to a recent report from Universities Australia.
International students account for about a quarter of university revenue and have long “helped keep the system afloat” as domestic funding has declined in real terms, according to Universities Australia CEO Luke Sheehy.
However, the report warns that growing policy uncertainty could threaten a key income stream for cash-strapped universities.
Assistant minister for international education, Julian Hill, recently defended the government’s tightened policy settings and made clear that a return to high-volume expansion is not on the agenda.
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