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Growing anger over Australian university job cuts but NTEU deflects blame from Labor government

Growing anger over Australian university job cuts but NTEU deflects blame from Labor government

Concerned opposition is developing at universities across Australia to the latest wave of job destruction, course closures and pro-corporate restructuring under Prime Minister Anthony Albanese’s government.

In recent weeks alone, university managements have announced more than 2,000 job cuts, with more threatened. This is a direct result of the Labor government’s reactionary nationalist cuts to international student enrolments, on top of Labor’s deepening of the decades-long chronic under-funding of tertiary education.

Workers rally at the Australian National University on November 14, 2024 [Photo: NTEU ACT]

The resistance was reflected in a vote late last month by staff members at the Australian National University (ANU) in Canberra to reject the management’s proposal that they sacrifice a 2.5 percent wage increase due this December—effectively a one-year pay freeze—supposedly as the only alternative to save jobs.

A total of 4,782 of 6,400 eligible staff participated in the management ballot, a measure of the widespread willingness to fight the escalating attack on jobs, pay and conditions throughout the higher education sector.

In response, the management, currently headed by Vice-Chancellor Genevieve Bell, a corporate figure, is now preparing alternative cost-cutting measures to inflict a planned $250 million budget cut. 

Despite the National Tertiary Education Union (NTEU) claiming a victory in the ballot, some 650 jobs are likely to be axed, accompanied by the “streamlining” of seven colleges into six. That is after the management previously eliminated 465 jobs in the first year of the COVID pandemic.

The NTEU is trying to deflect the blame for the latest attack on pay and jobs onto Bell as an individual, and away from the Labor government, whose agenda is driving the cuts nationally.

There is also outrage and discontent just several kilometres away, at the University of Canberra (UC). Stephen Parker, UC’s interim vice-chancellor, resigned this week, saying he had lost confidence in the university’s council after preparing a budget to save about $50 million by the end of next year, which would include cutting at least 200 jobs.

Parker is the third UC vice-chancellor to vacate the role in less than a year. In February, former Labor leader Bill Shorten is due to become the fifth UC vice-chancellor in the space of 14 months.

No doubt, the university council has appointed Shorten on the basis of his long record of service to the corporate elite as a trade union bureaucrat and government minister, most recently in devising cuts of billions of dollars in the National Disability Insurance Scheme (NDIS).

The job axing at the two Canberra-based universities is only the tip of the iceberg. In a report on “bad university governance” released last month, the NTEU said 11 universities had proposed “at least 2,091 job losses in late 2024.”