ߣߣƵ

Site disruption

We are doing some essential maintenance work and you will not be able to register or update your profile setting until we've finished, which should be at about 9pm this evening.

We apologise for any inconvenience - you will be able to register shortly. In the mean time you will still be able to log in as usual.

Give new commission power over fees, Canberra told

Multiple calls to extend Atec’s remit, as the cost of arts degrees edges past A$54K

Published on
January 30, 2026
Last updated
January 29, 2026
Fruits For Sale At Market Stall
Source: iStock/EyeEm Mobile GmbH

Next year’s hike to ߣߣƵn tuition fees is already set in train, and the tertiary education commission – whose role includes stewarding changes to higher education funding – will be powerless to prevent it.

Monash University policy analyst Andrew Norton said student contributions would rise by almost 4 per cent in 2027. Teaching subsidies and student loan limits will increase by the same margin.

Fee indexation for each coming year is calculated by comparing an inflationary measure from the last quarter of the preceding year with the equivalent measure 12 months earlier. Specifically, the indexation figure reflects the increase in the weighted average cost of key goods and services across the country’s eight capital cities.

That increase in 2025 was 3.6 per cent, the ߣߣƵn Bureau of Statistics. Norton said the 2027 fees for arts degrees would consequently rise to A$18,025 (£9,232), up from A$17,399 this year.

ߣߣƵ

ADVERTISEMENT

If these inflationary trends persist, people currently embarking on three-year humanities degrees – which carry ߣߣƵ’s highest fees despite delivering below-average graduate salaries – will amass student debts exceeding A$54,000.

Higher education insiders have long sought alleviation of ߣߣƵ’s oversized arts fees, which were more than doubled under the Covid-era Job-ready Graduates reforms. Many expected the forthcoming ߣߣƵn Tertiary Education Commission (Atec) to assume that task.

ߣߣƵ

ADVERTISEMENT

Education minister Jason Clare confirmed that Atec would have the power to examine course fees, according to a 2024 report in the , which said the commission would work to rebalance the cost of degrees.

The legislation to create Atec gives it no such power. Under the bill, the agency will only be able to influence fees indirectly by advising on government teaching subsidies – advice that can only be provided on the education minister’s request.

“Atec is supposed to be a system ‘steward’ but it won’t be allowed to touch the most controversial aspect of the current system,” Norton said.

His frustration is echoed in many submissions to a Senate’s committee’s inquiry into the Atec legislation. Universities ߣߣƵ said the commission’s remit should be expanded to advise on “student contributions and not just commonwealth contributions”.

ߣߣƵ

ADVERTISEMENT

Most other university networks agreed. “Atec must have the authority to examine the relationship between commonwealth and student contributions and recommend appropriate funding clusters and rates,” the Group of Eight insisted.

The Regional Universities Network said the legislation as drafted would “embed an artificial…wall” in how funding was conceptualised. “Atec [should have] regard for not only the total quantum of per student funding, but also the components of it.”

The universities of Queensland and Western Sydney likewise said Atec’s remit should extend to tuition fees. “This is a key in addressing the punitively high student cost for some degrees,” Western Sydney said.

The ߣߣƵn Academy of the Humanities also backed the call, saying students were amassing debts “that do not reflect their future earning potential”.

ߣߣƵ

ADVERTISEMENT

Norton’s 46-page submission proposes dozens of amendments to the Atec legislation – including empowering it to advise on fees – although his principal recommendation is to reject the bill in its entirety.

He said more than 800,000 ߣߣƵns paid university fees every year, mostly through student loans. “This part of the funding system is of high policy and political relevance,” his submission says. “It would be sensible to get Atec’s advice on the practical implications of different student contribution options.”

ߣߣƵ

ADVERTISEMENT

john.ross@timeshighereducation.com

Register to continue

Why register?

  • Registration is free and only takes a moment
  • Once registered, you can read 3 articles a month
  • Sign up for our newsletter
Please
or
to read this article.

Related articles

Sponsored

Featured jobs

See all jobs
ADVERTISEMENT