City
Epaper

Long-term underfunding affects Aus university education quality: Report

By IANS | Updated: July 12, 2023 15:35 IST

Canberra, July 12 The quality of education offered at Australian universities is affected by long-term underfunding, a new ...

Open in App

Canberra, July 12 The quality of education offered at Australian universities is affected by long-term underfunding, a new report published on Wednesday revealed.

The report, published by leading think tank the Australia Institute and the Centre for Future Work, found 83 per cent of Australians are concerned that universities are prioritising profits over education standards and almost three quarters are concerned about falling government funding per student.

According to the report, federal funding for public universities has fallen from 0.9 per cent of gross domestic product (GDP) in 1995 to 0.6 per cent in 2021, a difference of A$6.5 billion ($4.3 billion).

In Australia, student fees accounted for 51 per cent of university funding, more than double the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) average of 22.3 per cent.

The share of university revenue from private sources in 2019 hit an all-time high of 43 per cent.

"The long-term underfunding of universities inevitably undermines the quality of instruction, the quality of university jobs and the quality of a university degree," Jim Stanford, director of the Centre for Future Work, was quoted by the Guardian Australia.

"Our polling results show Australians know it."

Two thirds of respondents to the survey said it costs too much to attend university in Australia and 68 per cent said they were concerned about larger class sizes.

"Universities do everything they can to cut back on expenses. From casualising the workforce to larger class sizes to cutbacks in resources and supplementary materials," Stanford said.

"Imagine learning about cutting-edge science or health from people who are hired on a month-to-month basis. This isn't going to equip graduates with the comprehensive and thorough education they need."

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: Australia InstituteOrganisation for economic co-operationJim stanfordaustraliaMarie Claire AustraliaCricket AustraliaAdani AustraliaAustralian Federal PoliceCanberraAustralian Labour PartyAustralian National UniversityWestern AustraliaAustralian Broadcasting Corporation
Open in App

Related Stories

MumbaiMumbai: Over 10 International Schools Receive Threat Emails in 2 Months via Foreign VPNs; Probe Underway

NationalSolar Eclipse 2025: Know Date, Time, Visibility, and Key Dos & Don’ts

CricketSouth Africa Wins WTC Final 2025; Beats Australia to Claim Historic First World Test Championship Title at Lord’s (VIDEO)

CricketKeshav Maharaj Breaks Down in Tears After South Africa’s Historic WTC Final Win (Watch Video)

CricketAUS vs SA WTC Final 2025: How Much Prize Money Will Winner, Runner-Up and Other Teams Get?

International Realted Stories

InternationalQuad ministerial meeting very productive, will strengthen Indo-Pacific stability: EAM Jaishankar

InternationalISKCON temple in US targeted in suspected hate crime; India urges swift action and stands in solidarity

InternationalNepal's iconic Juju Dhau--King Curd--adapts with time, but tradition at risk

InternationalUS Vice President Vance casts tie-breaking vote as Senate passes GOP megabill

InternationalGeneva: Photo exhibition highlights persecution of minorities in Bangladesh