HECS indexation to be overhauled in budget with $3 billion in student debt 'wiped out'

Authored by abc.net.au and submitted by Cheesues
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In short : Student debts will be lowered for more than three million Australians under reforms designed to stop HECS loans growing faster than wages.

: Student debts will be lowered for more than three million Australians under reforms designed to stop HECS loans growing faster than wages. Loan indexation will now match whichever is lower out of the Consumer Price Index or the Wage Price Index — which the government says will prevent another shock increase like last year's 7.1 per cent increase.

Loan indexation will now match whichever is lower out of the Consumer Price Index or the Wage Price Index — which the government says will prevent another shock increase like last year's 7.1 per cent increase. What's next? The changes will be introduced in the 2024 budget and, pending getting through parliament, will take effect from June.

Millions of Australians with student loans will have hundreds of dollars wiped from their HECS debts as the federal government rolls out its plans for cost-of-living relief in the upcoming budget.

Every June HECS debts are indexed and bumped up a few percentage points to make sure the amount owed keeps up with inflation.

For almost 35 years indexation has been calculated based on the Consumer Price Index (CPI), which is now at historic highs.

Last year's 7.1 per cent increase was the largest hike since 1990 leaving some in a debt spiral with loans increasing faster than they could be repaid.

Annual HECS indexation will now be calculated on whichever figure is lower out of CPI and the Wage Price Index (WPI).

The policy will be backdated to June 1 2023, which means last year's 7.1 per cent indexation will be lowered to the WPI of 3.2 per cent.

"This will wipe out around $3 billion in student debt from more than three million Australians," Education Minister Jason Clare said.

HECS debt indexation to 'wipe out what happened last year'

The government released a wide-ranging review of higher education called the Australian Universities Accord earlier this year.

It warned student debt levels, which had reached $74 billion, were turning people off universities and recommended making HECS "simpler and fairer".

Among its recommendations was indexing HELP loans to whichever was lower out of CPI and WPI.

Is your HECS/HELP debt growing faster than you can pay it off? Contact [email protected].

Mr Clare said adopting the reform and backdating it to last year would help ensure HECS debts did not rise faster than wages in future.

"This will wipe out what happened last year and make sure it never happens again," he said.

Students and graduates had been bracing for another large indexation hit this year of about 4.7 per cent.

The increases had led to a growing backlash with some students so despondent they were considering leaving the country.

How much will you save on your HECS debt?

Instead of another dreaded rise, students will now receive an indexation credit.

Last year's indexation rise of 7.1 per cent will be lowered to 3.2 per cent under the new policy.

For a student with the average debt of $26,494 that means an indexation credit of about $1,200 for the last two years if legislation reforming HECS is passed after the budget.

If your HECS debt balance is: You should get this much back: $15,000 $675 $25,000 $1,120 $30,000 $1,345 $35,000 $1,570 $40,000 $1,795 $45,000 $2,020 $50,000 $2,245 $60,000 $2,690 $100,000 $4,485 $130,000 $5,835

The debt relief will also apply to apprentices who owe money through the VET Student Loan program or Australian Apprenticeship Support Loan.

These loans work in a similar way to HECS but for young people undertaking a course at TAFE or an independent higher education provider.

According to the latest available figures from 2022 around 30,000 students owed about $220 million.

"This continues our work to ease cost-of-living pressures for more apprentices, trainees and students, and reduce and remove financial barriers to education and training," Skills and Training Minister Brendan O'Connor said.

"By backdating this reform to last year, we're making sure that apprentices, trainees and students affected by last year's jump in indexation get this important cost-of-living relief."

Wider university reforms may be ahead in the budget

There will likely be more money to fund wider-ranging changes to universities recommended in the government's Accord review.

reviewing bank lending practices so that HECS debts didn't prevent people from borrowing money to buy a house

reviewing bank lending practices so that HECS debts didn't prevent people from borrowing money to buy a house changing the timing of indexation so it occurred after annual compulsory payments

changing the timing of indexation so it occurred after annual compulsory payments repealing the previous governments Job-ready Graduates program which increased the cost of some degrees and lowered others

The Greens have been pushing the government to go further and may demand further changes to support the legislation in the Senate.

As cost-of-living pressures have grown, so too has momentum for change.

A recent petition from MP Monique Ryan calling for indexation changes attracted more than 285,000 signatures.

Shadow Education Minister Sarah Henderson has also called for the government to act.

The government's budget will be delivered on May 14.

Asmodean129 on May 5th, 2024 at 06:23 UTC »

Whilst the title of the post is certainly uplifting, it's actually not quite as simple as "debt go bye bye".

Student debt is indexed against inflation, so it usually goes up by a couple of percent a year. However, over the last year it was indexed by 7% which is crazy high. Some people, even after making payments, still owe more than previous year because of this.

So the government has manually set the indexation to 3% instead of 7%, so it is going up less. (But still going up).

bonesnaps on May 5th, 2024 at 05:29 UTC »

Is this becoming just a PR trend or something?

Why not actually socialize education entirely at this point instead of countries picking and choosing different semesters or groups of students to absolve the debt of. It would kind of suck to be one of the years that got glossed over.

I'm confused. This is great news, but I'm still confused. lol

Cheesues on May 5th, 2024 at 04:27 UTC »

Understandably this doesn't seem like much in comparison to Biden's student debt plans, but Australia is a nation with a population of only 26 million people. This is a huge news!