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Thousands of university jobs being axed in Australia as Labor scapegoats international students

Thousands of university jobs being axed in Australia as Labor scapegoats international students

A meeting of Western Sydney University (WSU) staff and students last month established a rank-and-file committee to oppose the job destruction and restructuring at WSU College and across the university sector. To join the committee or form one at other universities contact: cfpe.aus@gmail.com

As many as 14,000 jobs are being cut already throughout Australia’s public universities, and thousands more are threatened, as a direct result of the Australian Labor government’s deep cuts to international student enrolments.

National Tertiary Education Union members rally in Canberra on May 11, 2023 [Photo: @NTEUACT]

The Albanese government is more than halving the number of international student and other migrant arrivals. It is trying to make them scapegoats for the worsening housing and cost-of-living crisis affecting working-class households.

This is eliminating university jobs and conditions, as well as cutting the quality of courses and research, coming on top of Labor’s deepening of years of systemic underfunding of the universities by Labor and Liberal-National governments alike.

Luke Sheehy, head of peak group Universities Australia, told a Senate committee inquiry last week that 60,000 fewer student visas had been issued this year compared to the same time last year, costing over 14,000 university jobs so far.

The Albanese government has not waited for the passage of its draconian Education Services for Overseas Students Amendment (Quality and Integrity) Bill, which would give it unprecedented powers to cap the number of international students. It has already slashed the intake by:

  • more than doubling student visa application fees from $710 to $1,600, adding to the financial burden of students having to take out private health insurance and prove they have sufficient funds to cover the exorbitant tuition fees (at least twice as high as for domestic students), accommodation and other living expenses.

  • slowing visa processing so much that an estimated half the international students enrolled to commence this semester, which began last month, still have not been approved.

  • imposing harsher English language requirements and “genuine student” tests, as well as measures to stop students living in the country after completing their courses.

This crackdown will intensify if the bill passes. According to media reports, the government is likely to decree that international students can make up no more than 40 percent of enrolments. Currently, 10 of the 39 public universities reportedly exceed that limit, and others are close to it.

The caps would also be linked to 2019 numbers, when overall student numbers were about 16 percent, or 109,000, less than the 780,100 overseas students in Australia in 2024.

The government’s efforts to blame overseas students for soaring rents and housing prices are entirely fraudulent. The intensifying housing crisis is the result of 13 government-backed mortgage interest rate hikes, the decimation of public housing over the past four decades and the underlying domination of the housing industry by billionaire property developers and profiteering building companies.