วันจันทร์ที่ 24 กันยายน พ.ศ. 2550

Tertiary education fees in Australia
Higher education fees in Australia are charged to all students, but Australian citizens and (with some limitations) permanent residents[1] are able to obtain interest free loans from the government under the Higher Education Loan Programme (HELP) which replaced the Higher Education Contribution Scheme (HECS). Most students are Commonwealth supported, which means the Commonwealth Government pays a contribution to the fees and students are able to defer payment of the remainder of the fees, which for Commonwealth supported students are called the "student contribution". Some domestic students are full fee-paying (non-Commonwealth supported) and while they are able to obtain subsidised loans from the Government up to a lifetime limit of $100,000 for medicine, dentistry and veterinary science programs and $80,000 for all other programs, they receive no other direct government contribution to the cost of their education. Overseas students are charged fees for the entire cost of their education and are ineligible for any loans from the Commonwealth.

HELP is jointly administered by the Department of Education, Science and Training (DEST) and the Australian Taxation Office (ATO).

Commonwealth Supported Students
The Government allocates a number of undergraduate places to each public higher education provider in Australia that are designated as Commonwealth supported places at university. These places are allocated to students via the tertiary admissions centre in each state or territory but are usually based on secondary school results (through the TER), TAFE qualifications and previous university results. Commonwealth supported places are available to citizens of Australia and New Zealand, as well as some Australian permanent residents. If a student is in a Commonwealth supported place, they only make a contribution towards the cost of their education (known as the student contribution) while the Australian Government contributes the majority of the cost.

Student Contribution

Band Curriculum Areas Contribution For 1 EFTSL[2]
National Priority Education, Nursing $0 – $3,998
Band 1 Humanities, Arts, Behavioural science, Social studies, Foreign languages, Visual and Performing arts $0 – $4,996
Band 2 Accounting, Commerce, Administration, Economics, Mathematics, Statistics, Computing, Architecture, Health Sciences, Engineering, Science, Surveying, Agriculture $0 – $7,118
Band 3 Law, Dentistry, Medicine, Veterinary science $0 – $8,333

The student contribution varies for each course. It is based upon the expected earnings following a students' graduation, not the cost of providing the course. The Government allows higher education providers to set their own contribution up to a maximum level (although since the government underfunds universities per place themselves, the universities almost always charge the highest level allowable[citation needed]). A student can pay the entire contribution and receive a 20% discount or defer payment on the contribution through a HECS-HELP loan from the Commonwealth Government. It is possible to defer payment on some of the contribution and pay part upfront. In cases of part payment, a 20% discount is received on the amount paid. Students who are New Zealand citizens or new Australian permanent residents are ineligible for HECS-HELP loans and must pay the entire contribution upfront and receive no discount.

Indexation Rate Formula
The indexation rate equal to CPI (currently 2.8%) is applicable to the part of the debt that has been unpaid for 11 months or more. Thus, indexation is calculated on the opening balance plus any debts incurred in the first half of the current year deducting any compulsory or voluntary repayments.

After the indexation rate is applied to one's account, the new balance must be a whole dollar amount. Any cents in the total are discarded

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