braindrainedAsh
Journalist
The one thing that I don't understand, and maybe someone can explain it to me because I am not an economist by any means, is why we once could offer university for heaps cheaper prices or free, and this was before our intake of international students grew to such high levels.... hence shouldn't universities be better off? Why have governments felt the need to hack away at education budgets so much? And yet they have a surplus budget, and want to make tax cuts? I just don't get it, why does the current government want to tighten the screws so much on public education (and this is not only in the tertiary market either, public schools are also been screwed over lately).
waf, your argument that bob the builder and granny may shouldn't have to contribute to university education is illogical. If we took that approach to tax and deciding what is in the public good etc, then I wouldn't be paying for detention centres, the war in Iraq or a chef at Kirribilli House because I don't think those things are really for the public benefit. The fact is that a componant of our tax goes towards things we may not actually use. But we pay tax because the money is used to create services that are for the public good (much like VSU, but lets not get that fight going again). An educated society is for the public good... the information industries require an educated workforce to function.
waf, your argument that bob the builder and granny may shouldn't have to contribute to university education is illogical. If we took that approach to tax and deciding what is in the public good etc, then I wouldn't be paying for detention centres, the war in Iraq or a chef at Kirribilli House because I don't think those things are really for the public benefit. The fact is that a componant of our tax goes towards things we may not actually use. But we pay tax because the money is used to create services that are for the public good (much like VSU, but lets not get that fight going again). An educated society is for the public good... the information industries require an educated workforce to function.