The centre-left opposition party gained power for the first time in nine years, during which time the country has been led by a coalition government, most recently that of Scott Morrison with his conservative Liberal-National coalition.

Independent Higher Education Australiaย congratulated prime minister Albanese, followed by a statement in which Peter Hendy, CEO of IHEA, said that it โ€œlooks forward to working with the new governmentย to build on the success of Australiaโ€™s world class higher education sectorโ€.

โ€œThe new government has an opportunity to advance Australiaโ€™s higher education sector and drive the success of our national economy into the future by harnessing the growing capability of Australian independent higher education,โ€ Hendy added.

Recently, theย 2022 IHEA Federal Election Platform was launched setting out a series of beneficial sector reforms to re-energise Australian higher education, tackle skills shortages and drive economic growth during this new term of Australian government.

Prior to the election results, aย supporting Australiaโ€™s international education and research sectorย reportย was released by the Group of Eight. It advised policymakers on how to utilise international talent in order to benefit from a renewed focus which would reposition international education and ultimately grow the economy and create higher living standards.

Among the Go8 recommendations are: introducing a new High Potential visa; increasedย support for researcher exchanges, bilateral research funding, and a commitment toย supporting Australian researcher access to the Horizon Europe program.

Additionally Go8 called for โ€œsupport to increase re-engagement and diversification of the international education sectorโ€.

The government should helpย establish new markets and re-engage with existing ones to provide a pipeline of talent, developย a national scholarship program that would encourage high performing students from a diverse range of nations in areas such as engineering, IT or quantum technologies, in addition to a two-way New Colombo Plan-type program to operate in additional regions of interest, such as Latin America.

It should also re-establish the Endeavour Leadership Program which supported two-way mobility for research and professional development with priority partner countries, Go8 added.

โ€œInternational education and introducing targeted visa settings will also be critical to ensuring Australia has access to welcoming the global talent pool and having a skilled workforce essential to meet the demands of new and emerging critical industries,โ€ Go8ย CEO Vicki Thomson said.

โ€œInternational education and research are directly linked to economic growth and the opportunity of higher living standards.โ€

Elsewhere in the sector, Universities Australia said that โ€œuniversities look forward to working with the government, and across the entire parliament, to ensure that all Australians have the opportunity to reach their full potentialโ€.

โ€œWe will work with the government to deliver the productivity gains that highly-skilled people and technological and social advances provide to the economy,โ€ said Catriona Jackson, chief executive of Universities Australia.

โ€œUniversities are a foundational part of an optimistic, productive modern economy and society. Our students, staff and researchers work across every area of human endeavourย โ€“ย giving our nation the best chance to tackle the toughest challenges and identify and grasp the big opportunities.โ€

Jackson highlighted the timely arrival of the new government, stating โ€œas we emerge from such challenging times, universities stand ready to play the fullest role in building back and taking advantage of the full spectrum of our national talentโ€.

The country must โ€œensure universities are in a strong position so they can maximise their contribution to the nationโ€, she added. Preย pandemic, universitiesย contributed $41 billion to the economy, supporting over 256,000 Australian jobs.

โ€œItโ€™s more urgent than ever that we invest in university teaching, learning and research capability,โ€ added Jackson.

Alfred Slogrove, CEO of Study Gold Coast, told The PIE Newsย the organisation is โ€œalways willing to work with all governments towards the benefit of our sector for our students, educators and the many employers that are dependent on its successโ€.

โ€œWith a new government in Canberra Iโ€™m hopeful that we can deliver better outcomes for our mutual benefit,โ€ he said.

โ€œThe new government has made a commitment to create an accord to bring together universities, unions, businesses, students and parents to rebuild stability and trust in the tertiary education sector, which is a good start.

โ€œThe new prime minister Anthony Albanese has promised to create up to 20,000 more tertiary student places and he also made a significant commitment to the VET sector by reinvesting in TAFE, which of course is great news,โ€ย added Slogrove.

โ€œWith a new government comes new policy and we will be advocating to retain the good, like the flexible visa, work and post study work arrangements and update the outdated policies.โ€

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