5 December 2017
Goal of tertiary billions hard to fathom
Labour must explain why it believes taxpayers should be paying more for people to study golf, homeopathy and skydiving,
National’s Tertiary Education spokesperson Paul Goldsmith says.
“The Government was reluctant to provide any detail on its multi-billion fees-free policy and now we know why – today’s
announcement has confirmed a return to the bad old Labour days of funding international hip hop study tours and family
reunions.
“Under the criteria outlined today, fees-free study options will include a Diploma in Tournament Golf from IGQ Golf
College, a Diploma in Naturopathy and Herbal Medicine from the New Zealand College of Chinese Medicine and a Diploma in
Commercial Skydiving.
“While it makes sense that golf students ‘have an in-depth understanding of golf theory’ is it really a high priority
for new spending?
“This is just bad policy. This is on top of the Government’s own estimates showing hardly any more students will be
enrolling because of this policy, when Labour has justified this spending by saying it wants greater participation in
tertiary education.
“Most of the 80,000 students that will benefit would have enrolled anyway and were prepared to make some contribution to
the cost of their study because they saw the lifetime value in it.
“New Zealand’s tertiary education system is already heavily subsidised and the average student loan is paid off in less
than seven years. This policy will just give even more money to people who will earn high incomes and should contribute
something to the cost of their education.
“The policy represents a colossal missed opportunity and grossly untargeted spending. Surely it would be better to
invest public money into targeting the very small group for whom cost is a barrier?
“And with all the money being sucked into supporting every full-time student in their first year, it leaves nothing to
invest in the tertiary institutions themselves so that they can deliver world-class education that equips the next
generation of Kiwis to be internationally competitive.
“The tertiary education sector has been left in the dark for months and it’s only now getting the details of this major
policy. It gives the sector less than a month to prepare for the changes – and all for a policy that acts as a solution
to a problem that doesn’t exist.”