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Submit your Research - Make it Global NewsThe Roots of the Student Debt Challenge in Australian Universities
Higher Education Loan Program (HECS-HELP), commonly known as HECS, is Australia's income-contingent student loan scheme designed to make university accessible by allowing students to defer tuition fees until their income reaches a certain threshold. Repayments are automatically deducted from tax returns as a percentage of income above that threshold, with no real interest charged—only annual indexation to inflation. This system has enabled millions to pursue degrees without upfront costs, but recent policy shifts have amplified the debt burden, particularly for humanities students.
The Higher Education Contribution Scheme (HECS), introduced in 1989, evolved into HECS-HELP under the broader HELP framework, covering various loans like FEE-HELP for full-fee places. For government-subsidized places, students pay a 'student contribution' amount, which varies by field of study. Repayments begin at $67,000 for the 2025-26 financial year, with marginal rates starting at 15% on income above the threshold, rising to 10% on total income over $179,286.
Job-Ready Graduates: The Policy That Backfired
In 2021, the Morrison Coalition government implemented the Job-ready Graduates (JRG) package to steer students toward priority areas like nursing, teaching, STEM, and IT by slashing their fees while more than doubling contributions for humanities, arts, law, and commerce. Humanities fees jumped from around $6,000 to over $11,000 per year initially, reaching $17,399 by 2026. The intent was to align education with job market needs, but enrollment shifts were minimal—less than 1.5% of applicants changed fields.
Universities Australia reports the policy failed to boost priority enrollments significantly, instead inflating costs for non-priority degrees. Critics argue it penalized students for choosing fields vital to society, like history, philosophy, and literature, which foster critical thinking and cultural understanding.
Treasury Modelling Exposes Extended Repayment Horizons
Treasury analysis from May 2025, released via freedom of information, paints a stark picture: one in four humanities graduates will take over 25 years to clear their debts, with many paying into their 40s. Median repayment for creative arts grads rose from 14 to 17 years under JRG. Debts over $50,000 affect nearly two-thirds of humanities and creative arts students, up 70% from pre-JRG levels, while low-debt cases under $20,000 doubled—but overall unpaid debt to government rose by $800 million due to lower repayment rates in low-earning fields.
This modelling compares JRG versus pre-2021 scenarios, highlighting how higher fees exacerbate lifetime burdens without proportional salary gains. For context, average HECS debt for those in their 20s climbed from $12,600 in 2006 to $31,500 in 2024, with repayment times stretching from 7.3 to nearly 10 years.
Debt Projections: A $55,000 Arts Degree Looms
A three-year Bachelor of Arts could accrue $53,400-$55,000 in HECS debt by graduation in 2028, factoring inflation. This equals a house deposit in many regions, delaying life milestones. Year 12 students like Tori Henderson weigh passion against cost: "Is your education worth more than your stability?" Humanities now dominate the highest-fee band, with communications and society fields similarly hit.
ABC analysis warns this deters prospective students, potentially shrinking vital disciplines amid ongoing university job cuts—thousands of academics sacked due to $1 billion annual funding shortfalls tied to JRG.
Photo by Annie Spratt on Unsplash
Job Market Realities for Humanities Graduates
Despite stereotypes, humanities grads boast 91-94.7% employment rates four years post-graduation, matching STEM closely. Median starting salaries hover around $65,000-$70,000, lower than engineering ($85,000+) but competitive long-term with transferable skills in policy, media, and public service. Victoria University data shows humanities earners outpace science/maths peers after three years.
However, declining wage premiums—59% above non-grads in 1981 vs. 21.7% in 2021—compound issues. Work-integrated learning (WIL) boosts employability, yet humanities lag in placements compared to vocational fields.
- High demand in government, NGOs, creative industries.
- Skills like analysis, communication valued across sectors.
- Challenges: Oversupply in entry-level roles amid economic pressures.
Real-Life Impacts on Graduates' Lives
Prolonged debt hampers home ownership—HECS reduces borrowing power by up to 10x debt amount—and family formation. Mitchell Institute's Peter Hurley notes grads carry debt into 30s/40s, forgoing houses or children. One graduate shared: "$45,000 debt post-arts degree—double pre-JRG—feels like a lifetime anchor."
Intergenerational equity suffers as low-earners subsidize via taxes, yet many never fully repay. Cost-of-living crises amplify this, with 2.9 million owing $81 billion total in 2024.
Australia Institute briefing urges repeal to ease pressures.Government Reforms: 20% Relief and Fairer Terms
2025-26 brought respite: a one-off 20% debt cut (pre-June 2025 balances), erasing $16 billion across 3 million borrowers—$5,520 average. Threshold rose to $67,000, with marginal repayments (e.g., 15% on excess up to $125,000). Education Minister Jason Clare calls these steps toward fairness, part of 31 Universities Accord implementations.
Yet JRG persists; new Australian Tertiary Education Commission (ATEC) may recommend fixes, but no timeline. Greens push repeal bill.
| Income Range | Repayment Rate (2025-26) |
|---|---|
| $67,001-$125,000 | 15% on excess |
| $125,001-$179,285 | $8,700 + 17% excess |
| $179,286+ | 10% total income |
Stakeholder Voices: Unis, Experts Demand Action
Western Sydney VC George Williams: "Deep systemic problems... debt for lifetimes on lowest salaries." David Pocock: "Unfair burden... urgent priority." Andrew Norton (Monash): Arts grads' incomes insufficient for full repayment. Unis Australia: Repeal JRG to halt cuts, restore viability.
Despite failures, Labor proceeds cautiously, funding up $6.7 billion decade-long.
Photo by Eriksson Luo on Unsplash
STEM vs Humanities: A Balanced Comparison
STEM enjoys subsidized fees (~$4,000-$8,000/year), shorter repayments (8-12 years median), higher starts ($80,000+). Humanities: longer timelines but broad applicability. Both contribute: humanities to innovation via soft skills.
- STEM: Faster ROI, targeted jobs.
- Humanities: Versatile careers, societal value.
- Risks: Over-reliance on STEM ignores humanities' $ billion creative economy.
Looking Ahead: Pathways to Sustainable Reform
ATEC could overhaul fees by 2028, aligning costs with earnings/teaching expenses. Prospective students: Blend majors (e.g., arts-commerce), seek scholarships, WIL. Unis expand employability programs. With debt relief easing immediate pain, focus shifts to prevention—equitable pricing ensuring access without lifelong chains.
Balanced reform could revive humanities, vital for Australia's cultural, democratic fabric.

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