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    Higher Education Summit

    The Australian Financial Review Higher Education Summit will critically examine the policy shake-ups, big ideas and bold strategies that aim at equipping the sector to meet the needs of our economy for decades to come.

    Event Details

    Higher education has had a bad year.

    Higher Education Summit

    The Higher Education Summit critically examines the policy shake-ups, big ideas and bold strategies that aim at equipping the sector to meet the needs of our economy for decades to come.

    Higher Education Summit - Early bird registration

    Join the Financial Review’s Higher Education Summit to gain insights into policy changes, innovative ideas, and ambitious strategies aimed at preparing the sector to meet the economy’s demands for years ahead.

    Register

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    Featured

    Higher education key to bigger pay, Labor MP argues

    When it comes to the relationship between education and earning capacity, research suggests more is better.

    • Julie Hare

    Ellerston Capital snaps up IDP Education stake, hoping for rebound

    The boutique fund manager’s Chris Kourtis told clients that the immigration restrictions weighing on the share price had created an “attractive entry point”.

    • Joshua Peach

    2000 jobs lost in foreign education sector the ‘tip of the iceberg’

    The Albanese government’s migration cuts have triggered staff cutbacks at colleges and recruitment firms, and at least one university has imposed a hiring freeze.

    • Julie Hare

    The politics behind the bipartisan U-turn on international education

    Slashing international student numbers will devastate the business models for universities and many other international education providers.

    • Jennifer Hewett

    IDP Education dives on fears international students will stay away

    The country’s largest listed provider of international education services says the restrictions in Australia, Canada and the UK are “linked to election cycles”.

    • Kylar Loussikian
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    This Month

    Foreign students ‘cannon fodder’ in poll-driven migration war

    Universities have accused both sides of politics of using foreign students as “cannon fodder” in a poll-driven exercise to slash migration, risking thousands of jobs.

    • Phillip Coorey and Tom McIlroy

    Migration is our ‘special sauce’, so let’s be rational about it

    We should be honest about failed housing policy, thoughtful about changing the international student mix, and not shunt blame onto migrants.

    • Allegra Spender

    May

    What cutting immigration will cost Australia

    This week on The Fin podcast, Michael Read and Julie Hare explain why net migration spiked and what deep cuts would mean for universities, the jobs market and economic growth.

    ‘Blaming a guest’: Chinese international students slam migration cut

    International students say they are being unfairly blamed for Australia’s housing crisis after the Labor government moved to clampdown on migration.

    • Gus McCubbing

    Higher Education Summit

    The Higher Education Summit critically examines the policy shake-ups, big ideas and bold strategies that aim at equipping the sector to meet the needs of our economy for decades to come.

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    Harsh migration cuts will stifle new mega-uni’s ambitions

    Adelaide University got its official tick of approval on Tuesday, but its plan to recruit 13,000 new students over eight years could suffer from migration cuts.

    • Julie Hare

    Foreign student crackdown looms over Li Qiang visit

    Chinese Premier Li Qiang will head to Australia next month amid uncertainty over new curbs on universities enrolling thousands of Chinese students.

    • Andrew Tillett

    Why universities are headed for a reckoning

    Half the students at Sydney and Melbourne universities are now from overseas. A decade ago, this figure was 25 per cent. But cuts are coming, and for some it’s a matter of survival.

    • Updated
    • Julie Hare

    Failure to rein in uni bosses led to problems of ‘excess’

    Peter Coaldrake has been deeply involved in the university sector for five decades, the past four years as head regulator. And he is troubled by what is going on.

    • Julie Hare

    ‘Window of opportunity’ for graduates to score debt reprieve

    An accounting quirk means some graduates can escape the brunt of indexation, but only if they act fast.

    • Lucy Dean

    Double Aussie uni student numbers? The question is still how

    A flurry of higher education announcements ahead of the budget didn’t get to the crux of Jason Clare’s big ambition. Neither did the budget.

    • Julie Hare

    Calling time on international student numbers

    Australia’s universities and colleges are fighting plans to reduce international student numbers. Spurred by the housing crisis, the government thinks it has no choice.

    • Jennifer Hewett

    Three Australian unis make it into new global top 100

    The Universities of Melbourne, Sydney and NSW are in the latest Centre for World University Rankings, but there are concerns about the nation’s research output.

    • Julie Hare

    ‘Horrible on every level’: Universities object to migration changes

    Changes to limit the number of foreign students at educational colleges, universities and schools are highly interventionist and prescribe not only where students can study but what they can learn, providers said.

    • Updated
    • Julie Hare

    New laws to cap international student intakes

    The federal government has stopped short of imposing a hard cap on international student numbers, but will introduce new limits for each provider.

    • Julie Hare
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    April

    Blaming students for housing crisis ‘simplistic’, universities say

    A new report finds that conflating international students with the housing shortage is opportunistic and could have profound ramifications on the economy.

    • Julie Hare

    Government baulks at hard caps on foreign student numbers

    The Albanese government is shying away from a Canadian-style hard cap on foreign student numbers and will opt for more nuanced measures to control migration.

    • Phillip Coorey and Julie Hare

    ‘The right time to go’: Maskell to leave Melbourne University

    Duncan Maskell, the University of Melbourne’s vice chancellor, will step down next year just halfway through his second five-year term.

    • Julie Hare

    Steep rise in student visa rejections ‘scaring applicants away’

    News of the federal government’s clampdown on student visas is spreading far and wide and the US is becoming the destination of choice.

    • Julie Hare

    Mass lay-offs at regional uni as international enrolments slump 90pc

    Federation University in Victoria could be the canary in the coal mine as its international student enrolments dive.

    • Julie Hare