What is behind increased rates of upfront payment of fees and student contributions?

It’s been a while – seven years – since I took a look at higher education student decisions to take out a HELP loan or pay upfront. Since then we’ve had instability in upfront student contribution payment incentives and increased student debt salience, triggered by high-CPI indexation. Anecdotally some students paid upfront to avoid high indexation of the subsequent debt.

Student contributions & HECS-HELP

The direct incentive to pay student contributions upfront has been framed as a discount. If the upfront discount was 10% and the fee was $1,000 a person who paid upfront would incur a debt of $900. The Commonwealth compensated the university for the lost $100, but avoided holding debt that might go bad and paying interest on its own borrowings to finance lending the student $1,000. In recent years, according to estimates in the Budget papers, about 15% of each year’s lending is not expected to be repaid.

The size of the incentive to pay student contributions upfront has varied over the last 20 years. Any incentive was abolished in 2017, restored for 2021 and 2022 to get Pauline Hanson to vote for Job-ready Graduates, and then abolished again from 2023.

I am in the no upfront discount camp, as I believe most people who pay upfront will do so anyway, whether there is a discount or not.

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