logo
Anthony Albanese's government introduces major change that will keep more cash in your pocket

Anthony Albanese's government introduces major change that will keep more cash in your pocket

Daily Mail​23-07-2025
Students and graduates will soon see a reduction in their HECS debts and save hundreds of dollars a year.
Federal Education Minister Jason Clare will introduce legislation to slash student debt by 20 per cent and increase the income that graduates need to earn before minimum repayments kick in.
It's the first bill that the Albanese government will put before parliament at the start of its second term.
People earning between $60,000 and $180,000 will save hundreds of dollars each year under the changes.
Someone on $70,000 will save the most, $1300 a year, on minimum repayments due to an increase to the thresholds at which the debts must be paid back.
Savings vary between incomes in the bracket, with people pocketing anywhere from $200 to $850.
Bruce Chapman said it would make it fairer by giving those on lower salaries more money in their pockets, while their debts remain the same in nominal terms.
'It looks bigger, in real terms it's not bigger,' the architect of the HECS scheme told AAP.
But the top priority should be reviewing the price of each degree because humanities students finish with the highest level of debt and end up being the lowest-paid graduates.
'All the prices are wrong,' Professor Chapman said.
Mr Clare said reforms were being looked at, after the failure of the former Liberal government's job ready program.
The program aimed to fill skills shortages by making it cheaper to study courses like teaching, nursing and psychology while doubling the cost of popular degrees including law, communications, business, humanities and the arts.
'If the intention there was to reduce the number of people doing arts degrees, it hasn't worked,' Mr Clare said.
'People study the courses they're interested in, that they want to do, that they love.'
The universities accord final report branded the program 'deeply unfair' because it punished students following their interest, and called for it to be scrapped.
It recommended that fees reflect future earning potential, as part of 47 recommendations to reform the sector.
Other aspects about how HECS is paid off also needed to be addressed, Prof Chapman said.
HECS repayments are taken from a person's pay slip if they're earning above an income threshold.
But the money isn't immediately taken off the HECS debt and is instead deducted as a lump sum at the end of the financial year after indexation has been applied on June 1.
This means a higher debt is indexed as the repayments haven't been deducted and the university accord recommended it be reformed to make the system fairer.
The Australian Tertiary Education Commission has been established in an interim capacity to implement long-term university reform and will review the HECS system over the next 12 months.
Mr Clare will introduce further legislation in the coming months to set the commission up as a permanent body.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

The big beef producer and the frontier wars; ‘progress' in Ukraine talks; real range of EVs revealed
The big beef producer and the frontier wars; ‘progress' in Ukraine talks; real range of EVs revealed

The Guardian

time28 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

The big beef producer and the frontier wars; ‘progress' in Ukraine talks; real range of EVs revealed

Good morning. We continue our Descendants series with revelations of Australia's biggest beef producer's historical links to abuses against Aboriginal people – through the actions of its longest-serving superintendent before he joined the company, and others who helped establish its farming operations in the 19th century. With all eyes on Moscow as Donald Trump's deadline for Russia to agree to peace with Ukraine looms large, US officials have met with Vladimir Putin at the Kremlin. An academic is crying foul after the University of Sydney removed a Palestinian flag flying from his office window. And: a new study finds the real-world range of EVs doesn't match manufacturers' claims. 'Chilling effect on free speech' | The University of Sydney has removed a Palestinian flag hanging outside an academic's office after claiming it breached a new policy regarding flags. The Descendants | The Australian Agricultural Company, or AACo, is worth about $830m as Australia's largest beef producer, but investigations have uncovered the company's historical links with the dispossession, shooting and poisoning of Aboriginal people through the exploits of Jesse Gregson and others who helped establish its operations. CSIRO cuts | Hundreds more jobs could be axed at Australia's national science agency, sparking concerns the country is gutting its research capability. Electric vehicles | A government-funded program to test the true performance of vehicles has found the driving range of five popular electric cars is between 5% and 23% lower than results from laboratory testing. 'No clear explanation' | Since July many Meta users have reported accounts being suspended erroneously – and Australian businesses are now struggling. A personal platypus | British wartime PM Winston Churchill was due to receive a monotreme named after him but it mysteriously died en route. German U-boats were blamed – but was that the truth? Russia-Ukraine war | Donald Trump said 'everyone agrees this war must come to a close' after US envoy Steve Witkoff met with Vladimir Putin at the Kremlin as the deadline to end Russia's war against Ukraine looms. Gaza crisis | Israel has issued forced displacement orders for Gaza City and Khan Younis amid fears of full occupation in Gaza. Our exclusive story reveals Israel relies on Microsoft's cloud services for expansive surveillance of Palestinians. Plus: the film about a Palestinian photographer killed by missiles in Gaza. Trump tariffs | The White House is placing an additional 25% tariff on imports from India, bringing total tariffs up to 50%, in retaliation for the country's purchase of oil from Russia. Bolsonaro detained | A Brazilian judge has eased the terms of Jair Bolsonaro's house arrest, allowing the far-right former president to receive visits from family. 'Islamophobic and discriminatory' | A local authority in Spain has banned Muslims from using public facilities such as civic centres and gyms to celebrate the religious festivals Eid al-Fitr and Eid al-Adha. Can Trump be shamed into supporting human rights? After three decades at the helm of Human Rights Watch, the former executive director Kenneth Roth has written a memoir about his time campaigning against human rights violations around the world – including in the Palestinian occupied territories. He speaks with Nour Haydar about why he thinks there's always a strategy to pressure governments into supporting better human rights outcomes. The US Bureau of Labor Studies released its July employment figures last week, and they were not good. In response, Donald Trump did what any autocrat would do when told bad news: he shot the messenger – by firing the commissioner of labor statistics. In his latest Grogonomics column, Greg Jericho argues that Trump's war on statistics is an authoritarian attack on democracy – and countries like Australia should call it out. The Tjanpi Desert Weavers is an Indigenous-run social enterprise that empowers women across 350,000 sq km of central Australia to earn an income through fibre art. Its contemporary art and sculptural works based in traditional practices have been exhibited in Australia – and around the world. Thirty years after it all began, Dellaram Vreeland looks at how 400 Indigenous women in remote Australia took the art world by storm. Sign up to Morning Mail Our Australian morning briefing breaks down the key stories of the day, telling you what's happening and why it matters after newsletter promotion AFL | Jayden Nguyen's Bombers debut could herald new era as the AFL tackles cultural diversity, Jack Snape writes. Cricket | The Hundred is set for Twenty20 transformation as early as next year, with IPL investors keen on a switch. Football | Liverpool grant Darwin Núñez the go-ahead for a move to Saudi Arabia's Al-Hilal; Newcastle's Alexander Isak ordered to train alone amid transfer speculation. Rugby union | Rugby in the US suffers another blow as the second team in a week exits Major League Rugby. Increasing numbers of older Australians are seeking to share houses as property prices continue rising and rental costs soar, the Sydney Morning Herald reports. Business leaders claim Melbourne's post-Covid recovery is under threat from the state government's plan to enshrine a legal right to work from home, the Age reports. NSW | A hearing is scheduled in the NSW supreme court as MP Gareth Ward fights parliamentary expulsion. Nationwide | A national student strike is scheduled in support of Palestine. NSW | The Lowy Institute is hosting a debate on 'How to defend Australia'. Business | AMP's full-year results are due to be announced this morning. Enjoying the Morning Mail? Then you'll love our Afternoon Update newsletter. Sign up here to finish your day with a three-minute snapshot of the day's main news, and complete your daily news roundup. And follow the latest in US politics by signing up for This Week in Trumpland. And finally, here are the Guardian's crosswords to keep you entertained throughout the day. Until tomorrow. Quick crossword Cryptic crossword

Trump once hailed mRNA vaccines as a 'medical miracle.' Now RFK Jr. is halting advancement
Trump once hailed mRNA vaccines as a 'medical miracle.' Now RFK Jr. is halting advancement

The Independent

time2 hours ago

  • The Independent

Trump once hailed mRNA vaccines as a 'medical miracle.' Now RFK Jr. is halting advancement

President Donald Trump hailed as a 'medical miracle' the mRNA vaccines developed to combat the deadly COVID-19 pandemic in 2020. Now, his health secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., is effectively halting the vaccine technology's advancement. Kennedy announced Tuesday that the federal government is canceling $500 million worth of mRNA research development contracts, putting an end to U.S.-backed hopes for the vaccine technology to prevent future pandemics, treat cancer or prevent flu infections. It's a sharp pivot from how Trump and top officials described the technology during his first term. Here's a look at what Trump and some of his closest advisers have said about mRNA vaccines that were credited with slowing the pandemic five years ago. Robert Redfield, Trump's director of the Center's for Disease Control 'A COVID-19 vaccine is the thing that will get Americans back to normal everyday life,' said Redfield, in a Sept. 16, 2020 statement. Americans were still donning face masks as one of the few ways of protecting themselves from a virus that had killed nearly 200,000 in just over six months. Redfield promised that the new vaccines — developed for the first time using mRNA technology — would offer a return to normalcy. Trump wanted to make sure Biden didn't get credit 'Don't let Joe Biden take credit for the vaccines ... because the vaccines were me, and I pushed people harder than they've ever been pushed before .. The vaccines are — there are those that say it's one of the greatest things. It's a medical miracle.' Trump said on Nov. 26, 2020 said during a news conference in the White House. Weeks earlier, Trump had lost the election in a bitter race against Democrat Joe Biden. As the Republican grappled with leaving Washington and continued to plan for the rollout of the COVID-19 vaccines, he reminded reporters that he oversaw the development of the new shots. 'They say it's somewhat of a miracle and I think that's true,' Trump said on Dec. 8, 2020 during a speech at the Eisenhower Executive Office Building. The event celebrated 'Operation Warp Speed," the government-funded project that accelerated vaccine development with pharmaceutical companies. Trump was promoting the shots as the government prepared to offer them to frontline health workers. Trump's first-term health secretary, Alex Azar 'It's clear that many Americans are learning these vaccines are safe and extraordinarily effective,' Azar said on Dec. 16, 2020 at a news conference. The government was shipping out mRNA vaccines to states, preparing to distributed it to the masses. Azar noted that a vast majority of Americans — between 70% to 80%, according to polls — intended to get the new COVID-19 vaccine that would be available to the public in the coming months. Gen. Gusave Perna, Trump's chief operating officer for pandemic response 'It takes somewhere between five and 10 years to put a vaccine on the street. Look what we did. Now, that's because of the great work of the scientists who had done the research on mRNA vaccines and others because of industry working on this, they just didn't wake up one day and start working on it,' Perna said during a podcast interview that aired on May 9, 2023. Reflecting in an interview about his time overseeing 'Operation Warp Speed,' Perna credited the mRNA technology with the government's ability to get shots in arms mere months after the pandemic started claiming lives in the U.S. in 2020. Trump supporters boo his vaccine accomplishments 'Take credit because we saved tens of millions of lives. Take credit. Don't let them take that away from you,' Trump said on Dec. 19, 2021 during a live interview with former Fox News host Bill O'Reilly. Daily COVID-19 deaths had ticked down to 1,500 compared to 3,000 from a year earlier after Americans began receiving their first doses of the mRNA vaccines. Trump revealed to O'Reilly and the audience that he had just gotten a COVID-19 booster. The crowd booed.

Sarwar: Dewar would be disappointed at devolution progress
Sarwar: Dewar would be disappointed at devolution progress

The Herald Scotland

time2 hours ago

  • The Herald Scotland

Sarwar: Dewar would be disappointed at devolution progress

The Labour politician served as first minister from 1999 until his death in 2000, however he is often credited as being the architect of devolution. While Secretary of State for Scotland in Tony Blair's government, Mr Dewar began the devolution process. It resulted in Scotland's first parliament in almost 300 years. Mr Sarwar praised Mr Dewar, adding he was politician who 'believed politics was bigger than himself and bigger than his own party'. He also had to persuade the country – and many within his own party – of the importance of devolution, the Scottish Labour leader said. Mr Sarwar said: 'Donald had to do something that I think others hadn't had to do which is he had to first of all win a referendum to get the Parliament. Read more: 'He then had to build credibility for an institution and he had to persuade people on devolution. He didn't have to persuade just his own country, he had to persuade people in his own political party, in his own political movement. I also think he was a person of immense stature, and also someone that believed politics was bigger than himself and bigger than his own political party. 'He was genuinely a politician that wanted to pull people together. To be honest, and perhaps we will look back on this and think it was a naïve view he had given everything that's happened in the last two decades in particular, but I think Donald genuinely believed that once you've got a parliament together with different people in different parties, we would do politics differently from how we did it in Westminster, and that we'd find common ground and that's what drives us, rather than finding differences.' The Herald's editor Catherine Salmond asked the Scottish Labour leader whether Mr Dewar would be 'disappointed' at the Scottish Parliament's progress since it was re-established in 1999. The Scottish Parliament celebrated its 25th year in September last year. Mr Sarwar said: 'I think he would still be a believer of devolution. I think he would still be a defender of the institution but I think he would feel as if progress and story of devolution in 25 years has not lived up to the opportunity and potential that the Scottish people demanded.' The Scottish Labour leader warned there was a 'real risk' that Scotland's debate would 'suit people who want to live their lives constantly in a constitutional arguments mode'. He added: 'I think it's safe to say that we have to change the drive for leadership, the back stories, and also the level of engagement and intent for ministers in the Scottish Government. 'I too often see ministers looking like they're there to fill a space rather than to drive outcomes. We've got to get back to being an outcome driven country. We've got to get back to being a can-do country, not a can't-do country. 'I honestly believe our people are there I just think – people often say does Scotland lack ambition? Scotland doesn't lack ambition or imagination, they don't lack talent. They lack a leadership that shares that amount of imagination and ambition. 'I want to start with a government that meets the aspirations of the people of Scotland.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store