Education reforms that disadvantage women?

Senators: Stand against education reforms that disadvantage women

CAMPAIGN UPDATE: Fair Agenda members have hand delivered your signatures to key crossbench Senators around the country, showing the community opposes education reforms that would disadvantage women.

Up to $45,000 – that­­’s the amount of extra interest women could end up paying on their degree under the Government’s proposed tertiary education overhaul,[1] a legislation package being negotiated right now.

Researchers have shown that the Government's proposed changes to university loan interest will effectively operate as a ‘double whammy’ for many women. First because the gender pay gap extends the time women need to pay off their debt (during which their debt will grow), and then again because any woman who takes time off work to care for children will see their debt grow further in this time.[2]

The cross bench Senators could be expected to vote on these changes as soon as next week. Can you make sure they hear loud and clear that their constituents don’t want education changes that disadvantage women? Sign and share the petition; and local Fair Agenda members will deliver your messages to the Senators' offices this week.

More information

[1] The Abbott Government’s planned de-regulation of uni degrees to hit women the hardest, National Tertiary Education Union, 26 June 2014. Figure based on a three-year accountancy degree, currently costing $30,255, which would climb to about $75,000. The repayments on the degree would grow to $120,000 – including $45,000 in interest, for graduates who take time off to have children and then work part-time. The degree would take 36 years to pay off – compared with 10 years for a typical graduate today. This compares with 23 years for an accountancy graduate who stays in the workforce, who would face repayments of $99,000 - including $24,000 of interest. ‘Women to be hit hardest by student loan debt’, Sydney Morning Herald, 27 May 2014.

[2]HECS upon you: NATSEM models the real impact of higher uni fees, The Conversation, 25 June 2014. ‘Pyne’s education policies hurt women – but the men in cabinet don’t seem to have noticed’, The Guardian, 11 August 2014.

Help us get to 3,500 signatures

3,280 SIGNATURES

Dear Senator,

We're concerned that the Government's proposed changes to university loan interest rates have a built-in bias against women. We urge you to oppose this unfair proposal, and any other education reforms that will disproportionately hurt women. 

Signed,

* required fields

Latest activity

Jean , 3155  /  signed 2014-08-21 19:31:10 +1000
Philippa , 2477  /  signed 2014-08-21 19:30:45 +1000
"This issue matters because all Australians should have the ability to go to uni and also to be able to afford it.
Make education affordable.
My generation went through uni for free, thanks to the Whitlam government."
Emma , 2093  /  signed 2014-08-21 19:28:09 +1000
Heather , 2152  /  signed 2014-08-21 19:26:50 +1000
"L"
Kim , 2093  /  signed 2014-08-21 19:26:30 +1000
"Dear Senator
With one child at university, another starting next year, and a third child currently in Year 11 who intends to study further, I have been gobsmacked at the changes proposed to university funding and to student debt. This is going to hit my family hard and I do not believe it is in the best interests of Austraila to put up barriers to tertiaary education."
Tanith , 2095  /  signed 2014-08-21 19:26:27 +1000
Sher , 2090  /  signed 2014-08-21 19:25:23 +1000
Catherine , 2460  /  signed 2014-08-21 19:24:50 +1000
"My children and grandchildren will be adversely affected by these changes. It is an abysmal approach to economics. Make education available to all levels of society and our whole nation and community benefits."
Mal , 3429  /  signed 2014-08-21 19:23:42 +1000
"I am writing this as a brother with three sisters, and as an uncle with four nieces. Why in Australia in the 21st century my sisters should be more disadvantaged than me, or my nieces more than my nephews, purely because of their gender, is absolutely beyond me. Australia could and SHOULD be leading the world in issues of equality."
Elizabeth , 7155  /  signed 2014-08-21 19:23:39 +1000
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