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FUNDING HIGHER EDUCATION Rohidin, Taufiq Damarjati David Greenaway and Michelle Haynes.

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Presentation on theme: "FUNDING HIGHER EDUCATION Rohidin, Taufiq Damarjati David Greenaway and Michelle Haynes."— Presentation transcript:

1 FUNDING HIGHER EDUCATION Rohidin, Taufiq Damarjati David Greenaway and Michelle Haynes

2 INTRODUCTION  Over the last 20 years of the 20th century there was a remarkable increase in participation in higher education in a number of OECD and non-OECD countries  In the case of the former, this was partly demand- driven, with key factors being increased female participation and increasing private rates of return to a first degree.  In some countries, it was also supply-driven, with policy initiatives to increase the number of universities and increase publicly funded places to support development of the ‘knowledge-based economy’.

3 INTRODUCTION (2)  One of the key debates triggered by increased participation is how to pay for it.  Governments have become less capable of financing higher education expansion owing to increased competition for public funds. This has triggered two questions:  should the beneficiaries of higher education make a larger contribution to the costs of provision  and, if the answer to this question is ‘yes’, how and when should they make that contribution?

4 INDEX OF ENROLMENT ON HIGHER EDUCATION

5 PARTICIPATION ON HIGHER EDUCATION  Type B = Further Education (Setara Politeknik)  Type A = Higher Education (Setara Universitas)

6 PARTICIPATION BY GENDER

7 PARTICIPATION BY ENROLMENT MODE

8 PARTICIPATION BY AGE

9 COMPLETION RATE

10 PUBLIC AND PRIVATE FUNDING

11 EXPENDITURE PER STUDENT

12 PUBLIC EXPENDITURE ON EDUCATION

13 WHO SHOULD PAY FOR HIGHER EDUCATION  Private sector?

14 WHO SHOULD PAY FOR HIGHER EDUCATION (2)  Socio Cultural sector?

15 ALTERNATIVE FUNDING OPTION  Increased taxpayer contributions via enhanced grant allocations  Introduction of a graduate tax  Education vouchers  Deregulation of fees  Income-contingent loans  Fees, loans and widening participation

16 RECENT DEVELOPMENT  Australia  HECS (Higher Education Contribution Schema) a charge of $A1800 (in 1989 terms) pro-rated by course load, butwith no variation by discipline; on enrolment students could choose to incur the debt, to be repaid through the tax system depending on personal income; or students could avoid the debt by paying up-front, which was associated with a discount of 15 per cent (later increased to 25 percent); those students choosing to pay later faced no repayment obligation unless their personal taxable income exceeded the average income of Australians working for pay (about $A30 000 per annum, in 1989 terms); at the first income threshold of repayment a former student’s obligation was 2 per cent of income, with repayments increasing in percentage terms above the threshold; and HECS could be paid up-front with a discount,but there was no additional interest rate, although the debt and the repayment thresholds were (and remain) indexed to the CPI.

17 RECENT DEVELOPMENT (2)  New Zealand  HECS loan repayments depend on an individual’s income, and are collected through a tax system which made this simple in operational terms; there is a first income threshold of repayment, after which there is a progressive percentage rate of collection. the loans are designed to cover both university fees and some living expenses, although there is also a system of means-tested grants for students from poor backgrounds; initially the loans carried a market rate of interest; universities are free to set their own fees (although it is notable that the resulting charge regimes did not differ much between institutions).

18 RECENT DEVELOPMENT (3)  United Kingdom  HECS a uniform charge of about 25 per cent of average course costs; the charge to take the form of a debt, with loan recovery to be contingent on income and collected through the tax system; the debt to be adjusted over time, but with less than the market rate of interest charged on loans; and revenue from the scheme to flow to the Internal Revenue.

19 CONCLUSION  the evidence on private and social rates of return provides a strong case or beneficiaries making a greater contribution than at present in many countries.  greater reliance on deferred fees repaid through an income-contingent loan system was potentially the most effective and efficient mechanism available  option of funding via deferred payments is likely to become more common.

20 TERIMA KASIH


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