Submissions for the ATEC bills Senate inquiry are appearing on the inquiry’s website.
My submission turned into a detailed analysis of the two bills, the main one setting up ATEC and another with consequential amendments to the Higher Education Support Act 2003 and the TEQSA Act 2011.
It draws from my seven posts to date on the ATEC bills: on its objectives, on mission based compacts, on student contributions and funding rates, on ATEC’s independence from the government, on the setting of the Threshold Standards, on international student caps, and on ATEC commissioners and their qualifications.
The bills should be rejected
The short version of my view is that neither bill should pass.
Although the full scope of ATEC’s powers won’t be seen without further legislation, the mission based compacts alone, as drafted, give the government/ATEC unprecedented power over universities.
This power is inconsistent with university autonomy and with proper parliamentary control over government officials.
On the available evidence, this power would be used to pursue a narrow instrumentalist view of higher education. Even modest acknowledgements that education has purposes other than economic or equity goals, such as the references to ‘cultural and intellectual life’ in HESA 2003, are conspicuously absent from these bills.
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