Australians 'to Suffer if Universities Are Left to Wither,' Says David Lloyd
Indaily
SKIPPED
Details
- Date Published
- 11 Sept 2024
- Priority Score
- 2
- Australian
- Yes
- Created
- 8 Mar 2025, 02:41 pm
Summary
UniSA Vice Chancellor David Lloyd cautions that Australia's universities are facing a critical financial situation due to reduced public funding and tightened immigration policies affecting international student arrivals. This has implications for the nation's capacity to advance research and produce a highly skilled workforce, essential for leveraging technologies like artificial intelligence. Lloyd argues that failing to support universities will harm Australia's competitive position in global research innovation, which in turn might stifle economic growth and technological advancement. The article highlights the significant risks associated with underfunding higher education, emphasizing the essential role of universities in developing new industries and meeting governmental educational targets.
Body
AdvertisementBusinessNationalNewsAustralians ‘to suffer if universities left to wither’ says David LloydThe UniSA vice chancellor is invoking the legacies of Bob Hawke and Robert Menzies to inspire bipartisan support for more funding in the university sector.Sep 11, 2024, updatedSep 11, 2024ShareUniSA vice-chancellor David Lloyd with his University of Adelaide counterpart Peter Høj. Photo supplied.Australians will experience lower standards of living if the nation’s universities continue to fall behind international counterparts, the sector’s peak body warns.With public funding already drying up, universities face a financial drought as the Albanese government tightens the tap on lucrative international student arrivals.This will further diminish the ability of tertiary institutions to deliver productivity-boosting research and train Australia’s next generation of high-skill workers, Universities Australia chair and UniSA vice chancellor David Lloyd says.“Imagine how economically self-destructive it would be for the government to ban shiploads of iron ore from leaving our ports, yet that is exactly what it is doing to our higher education sector,” he will tell the National Press Club on Wednesday.Amid billions of dollars in funding shortfalls, government spending on research and development as a proportion of GDP has fallen to its lowest level on record, leaving universities reliant on international students to bankroll research.Left untreated, Australia will lose out on the economic opportunities presented by burgeoning technologies like artificial intelligence, clean energy and AUKUS submarines.That matters to all Australians, who stand to miss out on social and economic dividends.“Australia doesn’t aspire to be average in any other global competition, yet our parties seem to be acceptant of performing far below average in this most crucial of domains,” Lloyd says.In an appeal for bipartisan support to increase funding, he invokes the spectre of former prime ministers revered by both sides of the political aisle for their development of the sector – Robert Menzies and Bob Hawke.Without increased support, the government’s target to increase the proportion of working-age people with a tertiary education from 60 to 80 per cent by 2050 is under threat. That could mean a windfall of $240 billion to the economy is lost.“These are the two paths before the major parties,” Lloyd says.InDaily in your inbox.The best local news every workday at lunch time.SubscribeBy signing up, you agree to ourUser AgreementandPrivacy Policy & Cookie Statement. This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.“One for the betterment of Australia and Australians, the other almost certain to damage the prosperity of our and future generations.“What good is a $22.7 billion investment to build a Future Made in Australia without the research and development work required to spur the growth of new industries?“We can’t afford to kick the can down the road, not when our productivity, economic growth and a major component of the government’s own agenda depends on this work.”–AAPInDaily in your inbox.The best local news every workday at lunch time.SubscribeBy signing up, you agree to ourUser AgreementandPrivacy Policy & Cookie Statement. This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.Topics:universitiesLocal News MattersDonateShareSend a CommentFollowAdvertisementSponsoredShop ‘til you drop? Not so fast. The dirty secrets behind Black Friday dealsTuesday, November 5SponsoredBehind the scenes at SA’s virtual emergency departmentMonday, November 4SponsoredWhat’s happening in SA: November EditionWednesday, October 30SponsoredWhy this family-run winery keeps winning awardsTuesday, October 29