Latest news with #vanOnselen

Sky News AU
6 days ago
- Business
- Sky News AU
Labor's international student backflip a 'farce', as economist claims Albanese government 'selling migration and work rights'
MacroBusiness Chief Economist Leith Van Onselen has claimed the Albanese government's backflip on international students will add to the already 'massive' number of migrants seeking permanent residency, favourable labour laws and work rights. The Albanese government announced on Tuesday a 'sustainable' increase of 25,000 additional international student places for 2026, bringing the National Planning Level to 295,000. Mr van Onselen branded the government's announcement 'ridiculous' and argued the 'farce' would contribute to a decline in university standards. 'Australia has the highest concentration of international students in the world… the government needs to get the numbers down,' he told 'We've diluted teaching standards massively, there's cheating scandals and soft marking. 'The integrity's been shot, the government should be focusing on a far smaller number of high skilled, high quality students. We're scraping the bottom of the barrel. (The government) should be going for the best of the best.' The MacroBusiness economist claimed 'enrolments are at a all time high' not because of the standard of Australian degrees, but because of Australia's work rights and potential access to permanent residency. 'We're not selling education, we're selling migration and work rights,' he said. 'If you took away Australia's work rights and permanent residency, none of them would come. Perhaps a small number would come to learn, but most are coming to work and gain permanent residency.' A joint statement put out by Education Minister Jason Clare and Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke said all international education providers will receive at least their current allocation next year, with the Australian Tertiary Education Commission to oversee future growth in international student numbers from 2027. 'International education is an incredibly important export industry for Australia, but we need to manage its growth so it's sustainable,' Mr Clare said. 'International education doesn't just make us money, it makes us friends.' Mr Clare said the Albanese government was increasing international student intake in a way which supported 'students, universities and the national interest'. Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke said Labor was maintaining the 'integrity of the migration system' while supporting a 'strong international education sector'. 'We are making sure student visa processing supports genuine education outcomes and our strategic priorities - including increasing provision of student accommodation,' he said. In March, Mr van Onselen wrote some domestic students had been 'forced' to help non-English-speaking students complete their courses through group assessments. 'Some tutorials have even been conducted in foreign languages, degrading the experience for local students,' he said, telling some students have claimed to have been subjected to tutorials delivered entirely in Mandarin. The economist also pointed to a 2024 Guardian article which revealed Australian academics were being pressured to pass hundreds of students suspected of plagiarism and other forms of cheating to maintain revenue streams. He claimed the government's media release on Tuesday was loaded with 'political spin' and was 'loose with the truth' about the 2026 planning level increase being eight per cent below the post-COVID peak. The eight per cent figure related to the flow of international students, which Mr van Onselen said was below the 'tidal wave' of commencements after Australia's borders reopened at the end of the pandemic. As a share of population, international students have doubled since 2012 when they made up 1.5 per cent. 'What it means is the numbers are going to keep growing, the total stock of international students is going to rise,'Mr van Onselen said. According to the Department of Education, in the year-to-date to April there were more than 794,000 international student enrolments, which Mr van Onselen said was up 105,000 since the pre-COVID peak. 'It's a disaster and hasn't boosted productivity,' he said. 'We've had 20 years of massive migration, no one can say this has made the economy or standard or living better, it's made it worse. 'They talk tough before the election and now with their stomping mandate they've gone back to their big Australia approach.'

Sky News AU
22-05-2025
- Politics
- Sky News AU
'Importing future voters': Economist Leith van Onselen links high levels of immigration to boost in support for Labor Party
High levels of immigration have been linked to a boost in the Labor Party's electoral base in the wake of Prime Minister Anthony Albanese's resounding win on May 3. Economist Leith van Onselen has sparked debate by asserting that Mr Albanese will be incentivised to maintain high levels of immigration due to migrant preferences for Labor. Polling by Redbridge and Accent Research during the election campaign found Labor's two-party preferred vote was in the high 60s among "diverse voters". "The Indian community is now our largest immigration source… it seems that that community votes overwhelmingly for Labor,' Mr van Onselen told 2GB on Thursday. 'Labor is incentivised to maintain a high immigration policy because it's effectively importing future voters.' According to a Carnegie India survey during the last federal election, 58 per cent of Indian-Australian respondents said they felt closer to the Labor Party than the Coalition. The countries with the most permanent migration to Australia include India, China, Philippines, Nepal and the United Kingdom. The 2025 Federal Election saw Labor retain key seats in Western Sydney, areas with substantial migrant populations. In the lead-up to the election, Immigration Minister Tony Burke faced accusations of using citizenship ceremonies as photo opportunities to promote the Labor Party. Home Affairs Department Secretary Stephanie Foster revealed Mr Burke personally instructed staff to schedule the ceremonies to fit his availability. Independent MP Dai Le, representing the seat of Fowler, claimed she was excluded from an event and accused Mr Burke of using immigrants as 'political pawns'. Mr van Onselen pointed out that while immigrants typically vote for Labor, much of the recent immigration occurred under previous Coalition governments. 'They effectively imported a whole bunch of people who were then more likely to vote for Labor... They probably did it inadvertently,' he said. Redbridge Group Director Kos Samaras also said that the timeline for migrants to gain citizenship and voting rights suggests that earlier Coalition policies have had a significant impact. 'What these conservatives need to appreciate is according to their theory, it was the Coalition government's migration program, from 2013 to 2019 that helped Labor,' he said. The Albanese government has confirmed its plans to reduce net overseas migration "down quite considerably" in the coming years. Net overseas migration was 446,000 in 2023-24, down from 536,000 in 2022-2023 according to the Australian Bureau of Statistics. The government's budget papers have forecast a return to 260,000 in the coming financial year and down to 225,000 the year after.