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Australia: Labors education revolution to
deliver for business
By Fergus Michaels
14 December 2007
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During the campaign for last months federal election,
Labor and its leader Kevin Rudd promoted an education revolution
as a central plank of its platform. Pitching to voters, Labor
campaigners contrasted the Howard governments neglect of
education with a series of promisescomputers for school
children, trade centres in schools, more money for vocational
trainingto make it appear that a Rudd government would address
the decay of public education.
This façade began to slip shortly after Labor won office.
The appointment of Deputy Prime Minister Julia Gillard to the
huge combined portfolio of Education, Employment/Workplace Relations
and Social Inclusion makes clear that Labors commitment
is not to the all-rounded education of students, but to providing
business with the skilled labour it requires. Every aspect of
educationfrom child care and preschool to tertiary education
and researchis to be subordinated to the requirements of
the labour market.
Labors education revolution is not simply
aimed at meeting the immediate shortages of skilled workers but
at positioning the Australian economy to be more internationally
competitive in hi-tech sectors and the highly profitable market
for corporate services, particularly in the Asia-Pacific region.
Not surprisingly, business representatives have lent Gillard
their effusive support. Interviewed on ABCs radio program
The World Today, Heather Ridout, chief executive of
the Australian Industry Group, cited the clear synergies
between Gillards responsibilities. Minerals Council of Australia
chief executive Mitch Hooke observed that the Rudd government
was looking to approximate what industry is doing,
and said Gillards appointment contained a wow factor
for business.
Interviewed by Channel Tens Meet the Press,
Gillard explained her combined portfolios were all of a
piecein other words, that education would
be narrowly refashioned to meet the needs of the workplace. Speaking
to a business conference, Gillard summed up Labors program
when she half-jokingly encouraged the audience to refer to her
as the Minister for Productivity.
In December 2006, after winning the Labor leadership, Rudd
emphasised that pressing ahead with market reform was a top priority.
In a major speech on January 23, he laid out his education revolution
as the means for implementing the next wave of economic restructuring.
In doing so, Rudd openly embraced the record of the previous
Hawke and Keating Labor governments from 1983 to 1996, insisting
that Labor, rather than the Coalition under Howard, had been instrumental
in implementing reform. Labor, Rudd boasted, had floated
the Australian dollar, deregulated the financial services
sector, reformed workplace laws to allow enterprise
bargaining, and slashed personal income and
company tax rates.
This first wave of reform resulted in the greatest
upward redistribution of wealth away from the working class in
Australian history. The second wave, based on the
National Competition Policy Agreement drawn up by the Keating
government, laid the basis for the privatisation and national
integration of government-owned utilities in each of the states
on an economically competitive basis.
Rudd made a definite appeal to big business, which had been
increasingly critical of the Howard government for failing to
maintain the reform momentum of the Hawke and Keating
years. He pointed out that when Labor was removed from office
in 1996, productivity was growing at 3.2 percent annually, but
had since fallen to 2.2 percent under Howard. Between 1998 and
2005, Australian productivity fell from 85 percent to 79 percent
compared to US levels.
Rudd warned that high commodity prices, particularly for exports
to China, had masked the falls in productivity, and that the resources
boom would inevitably end. With the growing globalisation
of production, Rudd asked rhetorically, how are we
to prepare to compete with China and India who are producing millions
of university graduates each year?
Rudds answer was a promise to launch a third wave
of economic reforma human capital revolution,
an education revolution, a skills revolution.
Labors policies
Labors policy document, Skilling Australia for
the Future, is directly based on several key industry studies.
The Australian Chamber of Commerce and Industry warned that the
deficit of skilled workers, which according to government data
will reach 240,000 by 2016, was the biggest constraint facing
business. The Australian Industry Group in its paper, Its
Crunch Time, identified 526,000 people aged 15-24
not engaged in full time work or study as a huge potential
skilled labour pool that had to be tapped.
In response, Labor has promised a 10-year, $2.5 billion plan
to build trades training centres in all of Australias 2,650
secondary schools for the one million students in Years 9 to 12.
Schools will be provided with between $500,000 and $1.5 million
in the first three years to obtain the equipment required to meet
the specific training needs of industry.
Labor has also pledged to deliver over 820,000 vocational education
and training places over the next six years. The disadvantaged,
recently referred to by Gillard as a severely under-utilised
human capital resource, are also to be harnessed. More than
175,000 additional vocational education and training places funded
over the next four years will be allocated to people who are currently
unemployed. All the Howard governments welfare-to-work
measures to force people into jobs by cutting benefits will remain
in place.
To oversee the efficient implementation of its plans, Labor
proposes to establish Skills Australia, a board of
seven representatives, comprising economic, industry, academic
and education expertise. Funding for new training places
is to be allocated to Industry Skills Councils that
will coordinate the needs of employers at the local level.
Labors education revolution reaches right
down to pre-school. Labors Plan for Early Childhood
is not aimed at addressing the developmental needs of young children,
but at capitalising on a prime investment opportunity. It argues
that government investment in early childhood learning brings
a high rate of return in terms of productivity and
labour force participation, and is necessary for developing a
smarter and more adaptable workforce.
Labor has therefore promised that all four-year-olds will have
access to 15 hours of government-funded early learning programs
per week, for a minimum of 40 weeks a year. Its longer-term perspective
is to develop an integrated national network of Early Learning
Centres, where the transition from child care to an early
learning program will be streamlined.
Returning parents to the workforce is equally important in
Labors drive to maximise productivity. That is why the government
proposes to establish 260 new child care centres on school, TAFE,
university and community sites. It calculated that the measure
will result in 34,000 people, particularly women with skills in
demand, re-entering the workforce in 2008-2009.
Labor is not concerned with providing child care as a basic
social right. The Rudd government acknowledges that child care
costs more than doubled under Howard. However, Labor only proposes
to lift the Child Care Tax Rebate to 50 percent, up to $7,500
per child per year, and to pay the rebate every three months rather
than once a year as is currently done. The increased rebate will
allow private child care centre operators to raise their fees
at an even faster pace.
Schools and universities
Schools will operate as the next stage in the production line
for skilled workers, for which a new curriculum and technological
facilities are to be established.
The government proposes to develop a national curriculum from
Kindergarten to Year 12, regulated by a National Curriculum Board,
to replace the present state-based system. In its statement New
Directions for Our Schools, Labor identifies the
international competitiveness of the Australian economy, rather
than the intellectual development of children, as the reference
point for the development of school curricula.
Accordingly, Labor will focus on core areas of
mathematics, the sciences, English and history to enable young
people to compete in the knowledge economy against
their counterparts in countries like Japan and Singapore. Labors
National Asian Languages and Studies in Australian Schools
Program will co-ordinate nationally the teaching of Asian
languages and culture, with a view to providing business with
the language skills needed to compete in the region.
Competition in the global economy increasingly depends on the
Internet and having a large, computer-literate workforce. Therefore,
as part of its planned national broadband rollout, Labors
Digital Education Revolution pledges to connect Australian
schools to high-speed broadband. It plans to invest $1 billion
over four years to provide capital grants to schools to provide
information and communications technology, and a computer
on the desk of every secondary student in Years 9 to 12
to increase productivity in the future.
Under Labor, universities are also to be increasingly focussed
as a training ground for the highly skilled professionals
Australia needs for our future growth. Australia is the
only OECD country where participation rates in tertiary education
have stagnated or are falling. High tuition costs, initiated by
the Hawke and Keating governments and escalated under Howard,
are a major contributing factor.
Labor has promised to phase out the full-fee degrees introduced
by Howard. Again, however, its policy is to produce the graduates
required by business. Full-fee degrees will be replaced with an
additional 11,000 Commonwealth Supported Places (CSPs) by 2011,
for which students will still pay HECS fees. CSPs will be allocated
on a university-by-university basis, in skills shortage
areas of teaching, mathematics, science and engineering.
Labors Scholarships for a Competitive Future
has the same objective. The government promises to double the
number of undergraduate students receiving a scholarship to 88,000
and the number of students receiving an Australian Postgraduate
Award for a PhD or masters degree to 9,600. The awards will be
allocated in areas that can lift Australias international
competitiveness.
Similarly, Labors Future Fellowships policy
will offer four-year fellowships valued at $140,000 per year to
1,000 leading Australian researchers. Again these will be targeted
in the potentially profitable areas of renewable energy,
manufacturing technologies, the sciences, medical research, and
education.
Labors policies are unabashedly business-oriented. In
launching his education policy, however, Rudd pointed to increasing
university fees and the crippling impact of debt imposed on graduates.
Labor, he said, wanted education for the many and not the
few. This is a complete fraud.
Any genuine effort to provide education for the many
would require a massive infusion of funds into all levels of public
education, with a particular focus on reversing the deterioration
of facilities in working class areas. Over the past two decades,
the principle of the marketuser payshas
been encouraged in every sphere of education. According to one
estimate, the proportion of federal government funding to public
schools was reduced from 50 percent in 1982 to 35 percent in 2006,
forcing many parents to consider sending their children to private
schools. Funding cutbacks have forced universities to increasingly
turn to private funding and led to the erosion of facilities.
The Rudd government has no intention of reversing these processes.
Many of Labors initiatives will either accelerate privatisation
of education or provide lucrative spin-offs for business. Those
best positioned to take advantage of Labors policies will
be the wealthier layers of society. All of this underscores the
basic fact that Labor education revolution is not
about providing high-quality education for all, but at meeting
the demands of big business for skilled labour, productivity and
profits.
See Also:
Australia: Labor government to boost
military spending
[13 December 2007]
Australia: Labor government moves to
ratify Kyoto Protocol ahead of Bali climate change conference
[8 December 2007]
Australia: Rudd Labor government commits
to "economic conservativism"
[4 December 2007]
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