The proposed new funding system, part 1: Setting the number of fully-funded Commonwealth supported places

This post is the first in a series of explainers on how the new Commonwealth supported student funding system will operate if the Universities Accord (Opening the Doors of Opportunity) Bill 2026 is passed.

The series is primarily aimed at policy advisers and people working in university planning offices. I covered the most important issue for the general public and prospective university students in this Conversation article.

This post looks at how the total number of fully-funded Commonwealth supported places will be determined. A fully-funded place is one for which both a Commonwealth and a student contribution is paid. Student contribution only places will be discussed in a later post.

The current system

As a refresher, the current CSP allocation system has three components:

  • Designated courses, where the minister allocates, via university funding agreements, specific number of CSPs. Currently only medicine for non-Indigenous students is designated. The funding formula is the Commonwealth contribution rate * the number of student places delivered or the allocated number of places, whichever is the lower.
  • Demand driven courses, currently only Indigenous students in bachelor degrees or medical courses. The funding formula is the Commonwealth contribution rate * the number of student places delivered. Effectively, universities and students decide on the allocation.
  • A ‘higher education courses’ grant in which each university gets a maximum basic grant amount (MBGA) to cover CSPs not in the previous two categories. The value of CSPs delivered in this category is calculated as the Commonwealth contribution rate * the number of student places delivered. If the value of these places exceeds the MBGA the university gets the MBGA. If the value is below the MBGA in theory the university receives that amount. In practice, in recent years, universities have received the full value of their MBGA via other programs despite not delivering CSPs of the required value.

The proposed reforms

All three of these components will change if the bill passes.

The overall higher education courses category will be allocated in CSPs instead of dollars, with no maximum basic grant amount. Total places will be determined by the minister, allocations to specific providers will be determined by ATEC.

Designated places will become a sub-category of higher education courses, used to allocate/restrict places in specific kinds of courses. While the minister decides which courses are designated, ATEC allocates designated places to providers.

Medicine will move into a new, separate category, still functionally equivalent to designation but allocated by the minister (as now) instead of ATEC.

The existing demand driven categories will be maintained and include a ministerial discretion to add new categories of courses. There will be a new mechanism to cap demand driven places if needed.

Read More »