Last year, Julian Hill, Laborโs federal member for Bruce, alleged that Australiaโs international education sector had devolved into a โponzi schemeโ by attracting international students with easy work rights and permanent residency.
Hill claimed that โagents in many parts of the world who are flogging our precious student visa as some kind of cheap, low-rent work visaโ were โmisusingโ Australiaโs generous work rights and the incentive of permanent residency.
โWe know that the incentive of a permanent visa to Australia is like a golden ticket from Willy Wonkaโs chocolate barโ, he said.
Hill was supported by Phil Honeywood, CEO of the International Education Association of Australia, the industryโs principal lobbyist.
Advertisement
Honeywood also labelled international education a โponzi schemeโ and a โrace to the bottomโ.
The SMH last month reported that dodgy migration agencies had recruited fake students with little English language proficiency to Australia to work as slaves.
The story revolved around Yongge โHenryโ Qi, who came to Australia to study marketing and communication but ended up working seven days a week at a suburban car window tinting plant for $5 an hour and was fed rotten scraps.
Advertisement
On Friday, Tertiary Education Quality and Standards Agency (TEQSA) chief commissioner, Peter Coaldrake, sent a letter to higher education providers warning that there is a โsignificantโ danger that a high proportion of international students arriving in Australia are not qualified for their courses and are not coming to study.
Coaldrake also informed that he was investigating several institutions for noncompliance with standards and that the integrity of the international education sector was at risk.
TEQSAโs โsector alertโ, sent in conjunction with Professor Coaldrakeโs letter, stated that it had observed escalating risk factors such as a large number of international students arriving โwithout appropriate qualifications or academic preparedness for their course of studyโ and โwho are not bona-fide or will not comply with the terms of their visaโ.
Advertisement
TEQSA also reported an increase in unethical activities by education agents, with a large proportion of freshly arrived overseas students abandoning the course they had enrolled in and shifting to so-called โghost coursesโ at other higher education institutions or vocational colleges.
This activity has disturbed industry experts, who claim that students enrolled in prestigious university courses are being pushed to switch to cheap, low-quality diplomas at other institutions, allowing them to stay in Australia to work.
โWe now have far more education agents working closely with dodgy (education) providers to poach legitimate students into ghost coursesโ, said Phil Honeywood, CEO of the International Education Association of Australia.
Advertisement
TEQSA also informed higher education providers that it had witnessed an increase in the number of overseas students enrolling โwithout being provided sufficient information about their chosen provider, course, or life and study in Australiaโ.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese recently signed migration agreements with India that, among other things, will grant Indians automatic five-year student visas and eight-year post-study work visas.
Therefore, the numbers of fake students seeking to work and live in Australia long-term will only grow.
Advertisement
Instead of clamping down on the rort by raising entry standards, Alboโs Labor has opened the door even wider.
The end result will be lower wages and productivity, more competition for rental housing, and crush-loaded infrastructure.